Cornell XHniversit^ OF THE IRew l?orft State CoUege of agriculture 5v<\.T^.o.n. \s;\>?:\r:?y^o. 8806 Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in tlie Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924003641333 MORTARS, PLASTERS, STUCCOS Artificial Marbles, Qoncretes, Portland Cements and Compositions BEING A Thorough and Practical Treatise latest and most impkoved methods of preparing and using limes, mortars, cements, mastics and co;mpositions in constructive and decorative WORK, including A PRACTICAL TREATISE ON reinforced concretes Prepared, Compiled and Edited By FRED T. HODGSON, 0. A. A. " AUTHOR or "Treatise on Uses of The Steel Square," "Modem Carpentry,' "Architectural Drawing Self-Taught," "Up-to-Date Hardwood Finisher," "20th Century Bricklayer," "Modern Estimator," "Art of Wood-Carving," Etc. PKOFUSEIiY IliljUSTKATED With Working Drawings and Sketches of Tools, Appliances, Ceiling Designs and Examples of Ornamental Stucco Work CHICAGO FREDERICK J. DRAKE & CO., PUBLISHERS ,1- CLop, .Viol COPYBIQHT 1906 By Frsdebick J. Fgior Chioago PREFACE In introducing this book to American Builders and others who are interested in the use of plasters, stuccos, cements and mortar, I feel that I am doing them a service, as there is no such work, so far as I have been able to discover, published in this country that appeals so directly to the practical workman as the present vol- ume does ; as I have endeavored to put together as much practical stuff as it was possible to wedge in in a vol- ume of this size, and in order to do this, I have gleaned the best things I could find in English, American and other books and journals, to which I have added much drawn from my own experience, and from the experi- ences of many practical workinen. I have particularly drawn at length from Miller's exhaustive work on the subject of plastering and stucco work, and am also indebted to the same source for a number of illustra- tions used in PART ONE. I have also drawn from Robert Scott Burns to some small extent, and from an earlier work of my own, and from articles I have fur- nished to various building journals during the last thirty years. Part Two is made up partly from my own experience, and partly from treatises on cements and concretes, and from 'Government Bulletins pub- lished in Washington, D. C. The paragraphs and illus- trations on reinforced concrete are mostly taken from reports of scientific societies, and from papers read before conventions, and from letters and descriptions prepared by manufacturers and users of Portland ce- 5 6 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES ment, furnished me on application, and from materials gathered from many sources, and, while I have added considerable from my own knowledge of the sabject, it may be said that the work is almost a compilation taken from the best authorities on the subjects dis- cussed. There is enough material on the subject of concrete floating about in the technical press, of the best kind, to build up three or four volumes of the size of this one, but, in analyzing it, I have sifted it down to the limits of this book, preserving that, which in my judg- ment, was best for the practical worker, and leaving out thfi most of that which might be termed theoretical and, therefore, to a large extent unfit for artisans' purposes. In making the selections in matters of this kind, the personal factor must necessarily be of more or less value, and I flatter myself that, after a successful build- ing experience in various forms, covering a period of over fifty years, my knowledge of the value of any problem pertaining to the building trades is deserving of considerable respect. It is this knowledge, along with some knowledge of cause and effect, and my simple and unvarnished methods of placing building matters before the American workmen, that have made my books so popular, and lured the working public into pur- , chasing, at this writing, nearly two millions of them. And I have reason to hope that this volume will, like all my previous ones, meet with a reasonable amount of appreciation from those who work, or guide the work of others, in cements, plasters, concretes and stuccos. Fred T. Hodgson. PARTI CONCRETES, CEMENTS, PLASTERS AND STUC- COS— THEIR USES AND METHODS OP WORKING same: INTEODUCTOEY This book, or rather compilation, is largely made up of the very best, material available on the subjects it proposes to discuss. All the latest improvements and methods in the mixing, proportioning and application of plaster, mortar, stucco and cement will be described and laid before the reader in as simple and plain a man- ner as possible. The art of using mortars in some shape or other, is as old as civilization, as we find evidences of its use in ruins that date long before historical times, not only in the older countries of Asia and Europe, but also in the ruins of Mexico, Central America and Peru; and the workmen who did their part, or most of this work, were evidently experts at the trade, for some of the remains of their work which have come down to us certainly show that the work was done by men who not only had a knowledge of their trade, but that they aJso possessed a fair knowledge of the peculiar qualities of the materials they used. "Plastering," says Miller in his great work on Mortars, "is one of the earliest instances of man's power of inductive reasoning, for when men built they plastered: at first, like the birds and the beavers, with mud; but they soon found out a more lasting and more comfortable method, and the 7 8 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES earliest efforts of civilization were directed to plaster- ing. The inquiry into it takes us back to the dawn of social life until its origin becomes mythic and prehis- toric. In that dim, obscure period we cannot pene- trate far enough to see clearly, but the most distant glimpses we can obtain into it show us that man had very early attained almost to perfection in compound- ing material for plastering. In fact, so far as we yet know, some of the earliest plastering which has re- mained to us excels, in its scientific composition, that which we use at the present day, telling of ages of ex- perimental attempts. The pyramids of Egypt contain plaster work executed at least four thousand years ago (some antiquaries, indeed, say a much longer period), and this, where wilful violence has not disturbed it, still exists in perfection, outvying in durability the very rock it covers, where this is not protected by its shield of plaster. Dr. Flinders Petrie, in his 'Pyra- mids and Temples of Gizeh,' shows us how service- able and intelligent a co-operator with the painter, the' sculptor, and the architect, was the plasterer of those early days, and that to his care and skill we owe almost all we know of the history of these distant times and their art. Indeed the plasterer's very tools do yet re- main to us, showing that the- technical processes then were the same we now use, for there are ia Dr. Petrie 's collection hand floats which in design, shape and pur- pose are precisely those which we use today. Even our newest invention of canvas plaster was well known then, and by it were made the masks which yet pre- serve on the mummy cases the lineaments of their occu- pants. ' ' The plaster used by the Egyptians for their finest work was derived from burnt gypsum, and was there- INTRODUCTORY 9 fore exactly the same as our "plaster of paris." Its base was of lime stucco, which, when used on partitions, Mas laid in reeds, laced together with cords, for lath- ing, and Mr. Miller, who has examined a fragment in Dr. Petrie's collection, finds it practically "three coat work, ' ' about % of an inch thick, haired and finished just as we do now. Plaster moulds and cast slabs exist, but there does not appear any evidence of piece moulding, nor does any evidence of the use of modelled work in plaster exist. That some process of indurating plaster was thus early known is evidenced by the plaster pavement at Tel-el Amarna, which is elaborately painted. The floor of this work is laid on brick; the first coat is of rough lime stucco about 1 inch thick, and the finishing coat of well-haired plaster about y^ inch thick, very smooth and fine, and showing evidence of trowelling, the set- ting out lines for the painting being formed by a struck cord before the surface was set, and the painting done on fresco. It is about 60 by 20, and formed the floor of the principal room of the harem of King Amenhotop IV., about fourteen hundred years before Christ, that is, between three thousand and four thousand years ago. Long before this, plastering of fine quality existed in Egypt, and so long as its civilization con- tinued it aided the comfort of the dwellings of its people and the beauty of its temples. Nor was it merely for its beauty and comfort that plaster work was used. Even then its sanitary value was recognized, and the directions given in Leviticus xiv, 42-48, which was probably written about one hun- dred years before this date, show that the knowledge of its antiseptic qualities was widely spread, and the practice of it regarded as religious duty. 10 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES Unfortunately there is no direct evidence that the adjacent Assyrian powers of Nineveh and Babylon used plaster work. Possibly the fine clay brought down by the rivers of the Euphrates and the Tigris sufficed for all their purposes. Their records are in it : their illustra- tions on the sculptured walls of their palaces are in stone, their painting is glazed on their bricks, and for them there seems to have been but little need for plas- ter work, nor do we find until the rise of Grecian art anything relating to our subject. Very early in Greek architecture we find the use of plaster, and in this case a true lime stucco of most ex- quisite composition, thin, fine - and white. Some has been found at Mycenae, a city of Homeric date. We know that it existed in perfection in Greece about five hundred years before the Christian era. With this the temples were covered externally, and internally where they were not built of marble, and in some cases M'here they were. This fine stucco was often used as a ground on which to paint their decorative ornament, but not infrequently left quite plain in its larger^ masses, and some of it remains in very fair preservation even to this day. The Temple of Apollo at Bassae, built of yellow sandstone about 470 B. C, has on its columns the remains of a fine white stucco. Pavements of thick, hard plaster, stained, of various colors, were common in the Greek temples. One of these, that of the Temple of Jupiter Panhellenius at ^gina, built about 570 B. C, is described by Cockerell as existing in the early part of the century, in good condition, though the temple itself was destroyed ; and I have seen at Agrigentum plaster existing in perfect state, though scarcely thicker than an egg-shell, on the sheltered parts of a temple built at least three hundred INTRODUCTORY 11 feats before our era, whilst the unprotected stone was weather worn and decayed. What care the ancient Greeks bestowed on their stucco may bp inferred from Pliny's statement that in the temple at Elis about 450 B. C, Panaenus, the nephew of Phidias, used for the groundwork of his picture "stucco mixed with milk and saffron, and pol- ished with spittle rubbed on by the ball of the thumb, and," says he^ "it still retains the odor of saffron." Lysippus, the first of the Greek "realists" in sculpture, was the first we hear of who took casts of the faces of living sitters about 300 B. C, so the art of plaster cast- ing must have advanced a good deal by that time, as he made presents of copies to his friends. Afterwards we read of many sculptors who sent smaller plaster models of their works to friends. These were, however, ppb- ably carved in the plaster rather than cast. Whether the Greeks used stucco for modelling is a somewhat doubtful point amongst antiquarians. From certain passages in classic writers I am induced to think they did. Pausanius, who describes the temple at Stym- phalus, an almost deserted and ruined city when he visited it about 130 A. D., describes the ceiling of the Temple of the Stymphalides, built about 400 B. C, as being "either of stucco or carved wood," he could not decide which, but his very doubt would imply that stucco or wood were equally common. Now, this ceil- ing was ornamented with panels and figures of the harpies — omens of evil, half woman and half bird, with outspread wings. He also mentions a statue of Bac- chus in ' ' colored stucco. ' ' Of course these are not defi- nite proofs of early Greek stucco modelling, but as the city of Stymphalus had decayed and become depopu- lated before 200 B. C, there is certainly presumptive 12 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES evidence of the ancient practice of the art. Again, fig- ures of unburnt earth are mentioned in contradistinc- tion to those of terra cotta, and sundry other allusions to plastic work occur, which lead me to the opinion that quite early in Greek art this mode of using plaster be- gan. At any rate, we know that it was early introduced into Grecia Magna — the earliest Southern Italian col- ony of the Greeks ; and as colonists invariably preserve the customs and traditions of their fatherland even long after they have fallen into disuse in their native home, we can have no reasonable doubt but this art was im- ported rather than invented by them. Thence it spread to the Etruscans Of Middle Italy, a cognate people to the Southern Greeks, by whom both plain and modelled stucco was largely used. The Etruscans, as we have seen, were more closely allied to the Greek than the Latin race, but in the course of time these two races amalgamated, the former bringing skill in handicraft, the latter lust of power, and patriotic love of country and of glory, whilst the Grecian element, which blended harmoniously with the first of these, added a love of art. This union, however, took long to ripen to artistic fruitfulness. The practical Etruscan element firstly constructed the roads and the sewers, and gave health to Rome. The Latins added to their territory until it em- braced half of Europe, giving wealth to Rome, and not till the luxury and comfort thus created did the artis- tic element of the Greek come in, giving beauty to Rome, and the day of decorative plaster work ap- proached its noontide glory, making Rome the attrac- tion of the world. The absorbanee of Greece as a Roman province took place B. C. 145, and the loot of it began, giving an enormous impetus to Roman art. Thousands of statues were brought to Rome, and to INTRODUCTORY 13 be deemed a connoisseur in things artistic or a patron of the arts became the fashionable ambition. But it was not until the century just preceding the Christian era that it became especially noteworthy. Of course there is hardly anything left to us of the very early plaster work of Rome. The constant search for some new thing was inimical to the old. Old structures were pulled down to make way for new, which in their turn gave way to newer, and until the age of Augustus we have but little of the early work left. Strabo, who visited Rome about this time, complains of the destruc- tion caused by the numerous fires, and continued pull- ing down of houses rendered necessary, for even pull- ing down and rebuilding in order to gratify the taste is but voluntary ruin; and Augustus, who boasted that "he found Rome of brick and left it of marble," m replacing the brick with marble destroyed the plaster work. How that plaster work was wrought we. shall learn more from Vitruvius, who wrote his book on archi- tecture about 16 B. C, and dedicated it to the emperor, "in order to explain the rules and limits of art as "a standard by which to test the merits of the buildings he had erected or might erect." Now, Vitruvius was a man who had travelled and seen much. He was with Julius Caesar as a military engineer in his African campaign in 46 B. C, or ten years after Caesar's invasion of Britain. Afterwards he became a designer of military engines, what we should call head of the Ordnance Department, and also a civil engineer, persuading himself that he had a pretty taste in architecture, just as though he were an R. B. of today. Thus he had a practical and also an artistic training, and here is what he says on matters connected with plaster work in Book VII, Chapter 11. 14 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES On tempering lime for stucco : ' ' This requires that the lime should be of the best quality, and tempered a long time before it is wanted for use; so that if any of it be not burnt enough, the length of time employed in slak- ing it may bring the whole mass to the same consist- ency." He then advises it to be chopped with iron hatchets, adding that "if the iron exhibits a glutinous substance adhering to it, it indicates the richness of the lime, and the thorough slaking of it." For cradling out, and f or~ ceiling joists, he recommends ' ' the wood to be of cypress, olive, heart of oak, box and juniper, ' ' as neither is liable to "rot or shrink." For lathing he speci- fies "Greek reeds bruised and tied with cords made from Spanish broom," or if these, are not procurable "marsh reeds tied with cords." On these a coat of lime and s%nd is laid, and an additional coat of sand is laid on to it. As it sets it is then polished with chalk or marble. This for ceilings. For plaster on wall he says : ' ' The first coat on the walls is to be laid on as roughly as possible, and while drying, the sand and coat spread thereon. When this work has dried, a second and a third coat is laid on. The sounder the sand and coat is, the more durable the work will be. The coat of marble dust then follows, and this is to be so prepared that when used it does not stick to the trowel. Whilst the stucco is drying, another thin coat is to be laid on : this is to be well worked and rubbed, then still another, finer than the last. Thus with three coats and the same number of marble dust coats the walls will be solid, and not liable to crack. The wall that is well covered with plaster and stucco, when well polished, not only shines, but reflects to the spectators the images falling on it. The plasterers of the Greeks not only make their stucco work hard by -adhering to these direc- INTRODUCTORY 15 tions, but when the plaster is mixed, cause it to be beat- en with wooden staves by a great number of men, and use it after this preparation. Hence some persons cut- ting slabs of plaster from ancient walls use them for tables and mirrors." (Chapter III.) You will see by these remarks the great care taken through every process, and how guarded the watchful- ness over the selection of materials, and you will also note the retrospeetiveness of Vitruvius' observation, bow he felt that the work done before the frantic haste of his own time was the better: very much as we find now. Time is an ingredient in all good work, and its substitute difficult to find. There are other "tips" contained in this work which are worth extraction, as, for instance, his instructions as how to plaster damp walls. In such case he prima- rily suggests a cavity wall, with ventilation to insure a thorough draught, and then plastering it with "pot- sherd mortar, ' ' or carefully covering the rough plaster with pitch, which is then to be "lime whited over," to insure "the second coat of pounded potsherds adhering to it," when it may be finished a^ already described. Further, he refers to modelled plaster -work which, he says, "ought to be used with a regard to propriety," and gives certain hints for its appropriate use. Speak- ing of pavements "used in the Grecian winter rooms, which are not only economical but useful, '^' he advises "the earth to be excavated about two feet, and a foun- dation of potsherd well rammed in," and then a "com- position of pounded coal lime, sand and ashes is mixed up and spread thereover, half foot in thickness, per- fectly smooth and level. The surface then being rubbed with stone, it has the appearance of a black surface," "and the people, though barefoot, do not suffer fronj 16 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES ,eold on this sort of pavement." Now all this bespeaks not only theoretical knowledge, but practical observa- tion and experience, and was written nearly two thou- sand years ago, from which you can surmise how far advanced practical plastering had then become. This written evidence is almost all we have of the work of Vitruvius' own time, for even of the time of Augustus hardly anything remains to us, as the great fire of Nero utterly destroyed the greater part of the city in the year A. D. 64, and almost the only authenticated piece of plaster work done before or during his reign is the Tabula Iliaca, a bas-relief of the Siege of Troy, still preserved in the Capitol Museum at Eome. That this was modelled by Greek artists is proved by the fact that its inscriptions are all in the Greek language, and by some it is considered to be of verj'- much greater an- tiquity. So much for the ancient history of the art of plastering, and I trust I will be pardoned if I con- tinue this sketch, bringing it down to a more recent period and show in what high respect the plasterers ' art was held in the Sixteenth Century, and later. Quoting from an old work, giving an account of the institution of "The Worshipful Company of Plaisterers, " and mak- ing use of the quaint language then in use we are told that: "The Plaisterers' Company, which ranks as forty-sixth among the eighty-nine companies, was in- corporated by King Henry VII., on March 10, 1501, to search, and try, and make, and exercise due search as well in, upon, and of all manner of stuff touching and concerning the Art and Mystery of Pargettors, com-' monly called Plaisterers, and upon all work and work- men in the said art or mystery, so that the said work might be just, true, and lawful, without any deceit or fraud wbat!?9?ver against the City of Loodoa or suburbs INTRODUCTORY 17 thereof. The Charter gave power to establish the Com- pany as the Guild or Fraternity in honour of the Blessed Virgin Mary, of men of the Mystery or Art of Pargettors in the City of London, commonly called Plaisterers, to be increased and augmented when neces- sary, and to he governed by a Mast3r and two War- dens, to be elected annually. The Master and Wardens and brotherhood were to be a body corporate, with per- petual succession and a common seal, and thej' were empowered to purchase and enjoy in fee and perpet- uity lands and ether possessions in the City, suburbs and elsewhere. And the charter empowered the said Master and Wardens to sue and be sued as "The Mas- ter and Wardens of the Guild or Fraternity of the Blessed Mary of Pargettors, commonly called Plaister- ers, London." THS OLD COAT OF AEJUS. The Company under the powers to make examina- tions, appears to have inflicted fines on offending par- lies for using bad materials, and for bad workmanship. Search days appear to have been annually appointed up to 1832, but not since, and the Company has not exercised any control over Plaisterers' work for many 18 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES Another charter was granted by Queen Elizabeth in 1559, but it has been lost, and there is no record of the contents. The Queen granted a new charter in 1597, which confirmed the privileges of the Company, and extended the authority of the Master and Wardens' to and over all persons exercising the art of plaisterers, as well English as aliens and denizens inhabiting and exercising the said art within the City and suburbs and liberties, or within two miles of the City. THB PBEBSNT COAT OF ABllS, Charles II., by a charter dated June 19, 1679, con- firmed the privileges granted by the previous charters. Having in view the rebuilding of the City, he forbade any person to carry on simultaneously the trades of a mason, bricklayer or plaisterer, or to exercise or carry on the art of a plaisterer without having been appren- ticed seven years to the mystery. The jurisdiction of the Company was extended to three miles' distance from the City. There were two orders made by the Court of Alder- men (exemplified under the mayoralty seal, April 1} INTRODUCTORY 19 1585) for settling matters in dispute between the tilers and bricklayers and the plaisterers as to interfering in each other's trades. The observance of these orders was enforced by an order of the Privy Council dated June 1, 1613, and a general writ or precept issue to the same effect on August 13, 1613. iKniAN Centre-Piece. There was also an order of the Court of Aldermen (29 Elizabeth, February 14, 1586-7) relating to the number of apprentices to be kept by members. An act of Common Council was passed, under date of 18 James-I., October 5, 1620. An act of Common Council (6 William and Mary, October 19, 1694) was also passed to compel all persons using the trade of plaisterer in the City of Loudon oi" 20. CEMENTS AND CONCRETES the liberties thereof, to become free of the Company under penalty to be recovered as therein mentioned. In the East the Art of ornamental plastering was well known and almost universally practiced before Mahom- et established a new order of things, and the enriched plaster work of India, Persia and other Eastern Em- pires are evidences of the high character of the work- manship of the Oriental workers in plaster. The Arabian and Moor brought back the Art of the Western World in the early part of the thirteenth century, and it is to them we owe the splendid plaster work of the Alhamljra and other work still in existence in Spain. In the Mosque at Medina, built in 622, are still to be seen some fine specimens of old plaster work that was wrought on the building at the time of its completion. The Mosque of Ibu-tubun, Cairo, Egypt, which was fin- ished in A. D. 878, abounds with beautiful plaster work. It contains a number of arches and arcades, the capi- tals of which, like the rest of the building, are enriched with plaster buds and flowers made in elaborate de- signs. Even in Damascus, thai old and far-ofE City indulged in ornamental plaster-work when the people of Western Europe were cutting one another's throats for political ascendency. We illustrate a few examples of old work taken from existing specimens. These will to some extent, give an idea of what the old plasterers could do. See illustrations attached. During the middle ages in Europe plastering and stucco existed only as a craft, and its highest function was to prepare a surface to be painted on. Sometimes it was used as an external protection from the weather but rarely was it employed for direct ornament. Some- times small ornaments were carved in plaster of Paris, but it played no important part in decorative Art, INTR0DU,CT0RT 21 excepting perhaps, as gesso, though this belonged rather to the painter than the plasterer. Nor was it until the eommeneement of the Renaissance in Italy that it showed any symptoms of revival. ■Arabesque from the Ckeat Mosque. Damascus. With the commencement of the fifteenth century old learning and old arts began to be studied, the discovery of the art of printing and the consequent multiplication of the copies of the lore heretofore looked up in old manuscripts gave invention and progress new life, 22 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES which has lasted until the present day. Italy has al-' ways been the nursing mother of plasterers, and in Mr. G T. Robinson's "Glimpse of the History of the Art and Craft," he has shown something of her great and glorious past, and how she sent her sons over almost all Europe to raise the ^ art and status of this craft. Persian Centre- Piece. Even during the depressing times of her history she religiously preserved its "ancient traditions and pro- cesses, and in almost all her towns there was some one or, two plasterers to whom was confided the restoration, the repair and the conservation of its frescoes or its stuccos. The art dwindled, but it survived. So late as 1851 an English architect, when sketching in the INTRODUCTORY 23 Campo Santo at Pisa, found a plasterer busy in lov- ingly repairing portions of its old plaster work, which time, and neglect had treated badly, and to whom he applied himself to learn the nature of the lime he used. So soft and free from caustic qualities was it that the painter could work on it in true fresco painting a few days or hours after it was repaired, and the modeller used it like clay. But until the very day the architect was leaving no definite information could he extract. At last, at a farewell dinner, when a bottle of wine had softened the way to the old man's heart, the plas- terer exclaimed, "And now, signer, I will show you my secret!" And immediately rising from the table, the two went off into the back streets of the town, when, taking a key from his pocket, the old man unlocked a door, and the two descended into a large vaulted base- ment, the remnant of an old palace. There amongst the planks and barrows, the architect dimly saw a row of large vats or barrels. Going to one of them, the old man tapped it with his key; it gave a hollow sound until the key nearly reached the bottom. "There, sig- nor! there is my grandfather! he is nearly done for." Proceeding to the next, he repeated the action, saying: ' ' There, signor ! there is my father ! there is half of him left." The next barrel was nearly full. "That's me! exclaimed he; and at the last barrel he chuckled at finding it more than half full: "That's for the little ones, signor 1" Astonished at this barely understood explanation, the architect learned that it was the cus- tom of the old plasterers, whose trade descended from father to son for many successive generations, to care- fully preserve any fine white lime produced by- burning fragments of pure statuary, and to each fill a barrel for his successors. This they turned over from time to 24 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES time, and let it ain — slake in the moist air of the vault, and so provide pure old lime for the future by which to preserve and repair the old works they venerated. After-inquiries showed that this was a common prac- PoRTiON OF A Ceiling from Teheran, Persia. tice in many an old town, and thus the value of old air-slaked lime, such as had been written about eighteen hundred years before, was preserved as a secret of the trade in Italy, whilst the rest of Europe" was advocating INTRODUCTORY 25 the exclusive use of newly burnt and hot slaked lime. Was there in the early part, indeed even in the middle Diapfkeh Pi.astbr I'anem.ino in tiir Aihamhha, Si-jvin. Thirifenth Century. of the present century, any plaster image seller who was not an Italian? Indeed, at this present time, almost 26 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES all the "formatore" or piece moulders for the majority of the sculptors of Europe are of Italian nationality or descent, and chiefly by these has the national craft been maintained. When after the long European wars of the eighteenth and the commencement of the nineteenth century Italy had rest and power to "make itself" (faro de se), the first revival of its industry was felt by her plasterers, and as there was then, as now, more workmen than mm^wm^m'^^m J=r'^.!q>-k^.h^.!yjq^gk.^.W=rWJa^.^.!q^^ sis^wmmmmm^mmm^^mm>mMPWimmmi^^^ i^^^swwSii'lii»'Mi'iiiiiiii.p'i!i'''"iniMi'iii,iiwiiii|4riiii!ii'; Plaster Frieze in Mosoue of Sultax Hasan. Fourteenth Century. work, they emigrated to the neighboring countries; and- the major part of the plasterers along the Revieda, in the southern provinces of Germany and Austria, are Italians who go off with and return with the swallows, to earn that wage the poverty of their own country cannot afford them. With this brief historical sum- mary I conclude the Introductory notice, and will now pass on to the more practical domain of the Plasterers' Art, MATERIALS. XJMES, CEMENTS, MORTARS, SAND, PLASTERS AND LATHS, LIMES. The Lime Principally Used for internal plastering is that calcined from carbonate of lime, in v^hich the impurities do not exceed 6 per cent., and is known as fat lime, pure lime or rich lime. It is unfit for any purpose where strength is required, or in situations where it is exposed to the weather, as it has no setting power, and is easily dissolved by wet. Hydraulic Limes are those which,' in order to set, do not require any outside influences, their own chemical composition of lime and silica, when burnt, being suf- ficient for the purpose. The name is given for their capability of setting and hardening under water. Hy- draulic limes are obtained mostly from the lias. Oood Hydraulic Limes are obtained from many places in the United States and Canada, the best known is "The Rosendale Hydraulic Cement." Artificial Hydraulic Limes may be made by mixing a sufficient quantity of clay with pure lime to obtain a composition like that of a good natural hydraulic limestone. The lime, if soft, may be mixed with the clay and burnt raw, or, as is more usual, may be burnt, slaked, ground, and then mixed with the clay and re- burnt. The Purer the Lime the quicker will it slake. Great care should be taken that the lime is properly burnt or otherwise it will not slake properly, and will prob- ably "blow" in the work. 27 28 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES TTie Perfect Slaking of the burnt lime before being used is very important, as it will slake eventually, and cause blisters in the work. In order to effect thorough slaking, the lime should be "run" as soon as the build- ing is commenced. It should not be used unless it has been slaked at least three weeks. A Bushel of Lime requires in slaking about a gallon and a half of water. Lime which Slakes Quickly and with great heat is generally considered to be the best for plasterers' work. When Lime "Falls" in dry weather without any sufficient apparent moisture, it is considered to foretell rain. The Lime Should Be Bun in couch on the site, where it can be seen by the architect. Care should be taken that as much lime is run as is required for the whole of the building. The Plasterer, partly, perhaps, to avoid the money outlaj'', and partly to avoid the necessity of having to cart away any lime, has a tendency to run an insuf- ficient quantity of lime. The result of this is that he, commencing at the top, the usually less important part of the building, has used up his lime by the time he has reached the principal rooms on the ground floor, and has to have recourse to possibly insufficiently sea- soned lime, with an unfortunate effect on the work, as stated above. SAND. The Functions of Sand as used in plaster are (1) the production of regular shrinkage and the prevention of excessive shrinkage, otherwise cracking is the result; (2) to form channels for the crystallization. MATEBIALS 29 Sand should be clean, sharp, and hard. The size of the grains does not influence the strength of the mortar, but, of course, the finer the plaster is required to be the finer must the sand be. Fine sand is best for hy- draulic lime and coarse for fat limes, coarse stuff and Portland cement- for flqating. Uniformity of size is not desirable. The Proportion of Sand to Lime will vary consider- ably, according to circumstances, and is difficult to de- termine. One part of lime to two parts of sand is a usual mixture. Sand is Cheaper than Lime, and it must be remem- bered that this is an inducement to use too large a pro- portion of sand in order to cheapen the plaster. Sand is Obtained from rivers, pits, or the sea. Sea sand, or that from tidal rivers, should be avoided, as , the salt never dries, and will come out on the surface sooner or later, discoloring the wall papers, paint, etc., and keeping the walls damp. River Sand is often used, but it is not to be recom- mended, because the sharpness of the grains is worn off by the action of the running water.. It is easily obtained, however, and the light color of much river sand causes it to be used in internal work with the white cements. Pit Sand is, the best. It sometimes contains loam or clay, which should be carefully washed out. All Sand for High^Class Plastering is best washed. HAIR. Hair is used in plaster in order to bind it together. Good Hair should be long, curled, strong, and clean. Ox or cow hair is most generally used, and there are three qualities. 3d CEMENTS AND CONCRETES It Should Be Well Separated before being mixed with the plaster, and care should be taken in the mix- ing that the' hairs are not broken. CEMENTS. Portland Cement, with a large proportion of sand, as much a^ 90 per cent., is useful for internal work; it may be used as a backing for a thin floating of the white cements. The Heavier and Slower in Setting cements are gen- erally the stronger; but in such plasterer's work as rendering walls the quicker setting cements may be used without disadvantage. Roman Cement is a "natural" cement. It is liable to efiSoresee on the surface, but is useful where quick setting with expansion is required, as in underpinning or repairs, without any great ultimate strength. Other "Natural Cements" very similar to Roman are Medina, Rosendale, Windsor, etc., and are also use- ful where quick setting is required. The Use of the Natural Cements is much restricted at the present time as compared with artificial cements, such as Portland. Parian Cement is valuable for internal work, by rea- son of its hardness, nonporosity, and quick setting properties. It is hence useful in cases where the walls, mouldings, etc., have to stand rough usage. It is also washable. This cement will not admit of being re- worked. Keene's Cement is one of the most useful of the artificial cements. It is harder than the other kinds made from plaster of Paris, and is much used for pilas- ters, columns, etc., as it sets quickly and can be pol- ished, and takes paint excelleiitly. MATERIALS 31 Martin's Cement is^mueh the same as Keene's, and used principally for dadoes, etc. In proportion to its bulk it covers a large proportion of surface. It can be painted, etc., as Keene's. Robinson's Cement has many advantages, among which are its fire-resisting qualities and suitability for use on concrete. It is also cheaper than other like cements. Adamant is another white cement, which is useful for work where hardness, facility of application, quick dry- ing, and a fine surface are required. The Above Cements have plaster of Paris (calcined gypsum) for their base, and are only adapted for in- ternal uses, to which they are eminently suited. They can all be brought to a good surface, and can be painted almost at once. Selenitic Cement is based on the property which sul- phate of lime as plaster of Paris, when added to lime possessing hydraulic properties, has of causing its more rapid setting. It also increases the proportion of sand which it will bear. It is useful in plastering as a back- ing for the white cements, such as Parian. PLASTEE OF PARIS. Plaster of Paris is made by the gentle calcination ,of gypsum, previously ground. It is known in the plas- tering trade as plaster. The Principal Use of Plaster of Paris is in mixing with ordinary putty in order to produce greater rapid- ity in setting, but the fast setting plasters of Paris are not, of course, the best for working with, nor do they become as hard as the slower setting. The Proportion of Plaster of Paris to ordinary lime putty varies greatly from about 1 in 4 to 1 in 20, de- 32 CEMENTS AND CONCREfES pending on circumstances, such as the state of the weather, the speed with which the work has to be fin- ished, etc. It is also used largely for cast ornaments, in cornices, etc., and, by reason of its quick setting and expansion when setting, for stopping holes, etc. LATHS. Pine, Cedar and Metal are used for laths for mod- ern work; only the best quality should be used. Oak Laths and Cypress formerly used, are very liable to warp. The Defects to Be Avoided in Laths are sap, knots, crookedness, and undue smoothness. The sap decays; the knots weaken the laths; the crookedness interferes with the even laying on of the stuff; and the undue smoothness does not give sufficient hold for the plaster on the lath. Biven' Laths, split from the log along its fibres, are stronger than sawn laths, as in the latter process the fibres of the wood are often cut through. Laths May Be Obtained in Three Sizes, namely: "Single" (average 1-8 in. to 3-16 in. thick), "lath and half" (average ^4 ™- thick) and "double" (% in. to % in. thick). The Thicker Laths should be used in the ceilings, be- cause of the strain upon them, and the thinner in ver- tical partitions, etc., where there is but little strain. Where walls and partitions have to stand rongh usage the thicker laths are necessary. Laths Are Usually Spaced with about % in. between them for key. A Bunch of Laths usually contains a hundred pieces and such a bunch nailed, with butt, joints, cover about MATERIALS 33 ^Vz ys, arrises, etc., and make good to all mantelpieces; cut away for and make good after all other trades, and cut out and make SPECIFICATION CLAUSES 45 good all cracks, blisters, and other defects, and leave plaster work perfect at completion. 15. Ding walls where shown on plans with a coat of Portland cement 1 part, sand 2 parts, pea-grit 1 part, and ground chalk 1 part. Finish walls where shown with a rough coat of Portland cement 1 part and sand 3 parts, and rough cast with fine pea-grit. 16. Stop And twice lime white soffits and walls of . . 17. Twice distemper white all ceilings, soffits, and cornices, and twice distemper to approved tints the walls of all rooms. PREPARATION OP BILL OP QUANTITIES. MATERIALS. Materials and Plant, etc. — 1 to 7. These items ap- pear in the heading under Specification clauses. WORKMANSHIP. Ceilings, Partitions, and Walls. — 8 and 10. These are all billed at per yd. super, including lathing where required, also hacking concrete and any dubbing in the latter, stating the thickness. Keep all plaster work less than 12 in. wide separate in "narrow widths." Wirelathing. — 9. These being narrow, it is advisable to measure them at per ft. run, stating the width. Cornices. — 11. Cornices and mouldings under 12 in. girt are measured at per ft. run and those over this girt at per ft. super, number all mitres, stoppings, etc. ; those to the running items following same, and those to the superficial items averaged for girt. See whether bracketing is required; if so, take the girt required at per ft. super., numbering angle brackets to mitres and returned ends, and averaging the girt. Measure the walls and ceilings less by the height and projection of the cornice, and add to the girt of the cornice 2 in. (i. e., 1 in. for each edge) for the portion up to the ceiling and walls. Enrichments are measured at per ft. run, giving the girt and description, and including the modelling. If 46 BILL OP QUANTITIES 47 of exceptional character, a provision for modelling is sometimes inserted. Angles. — 12. These appear in bill in feet run with the girt of moulding or bead (if any) and also the widths of returns. Number the stops, mitres, etc., al- lowing each to follow the item to which they apply. The finishings to concrete beams, lintels, etc., is kept separate as in "narrow widths to beams, etc.," and all arrises, etc., being measured at per ft. run. Skirtings or Dadoes. — 13. Describe skirtings or dadoes giving height and projection, and also finish at top, and measure at per ft. run, numbering all mitres, ends, etc. Include the dubbing with the item. The general wall plastering is deducted for these. Floating for mosaic and tile pavings appears in the bill in yard super. Quirks. — 14. Labor to splays, quirks, arrises, etc., are measured at per ft. run. The attendance on trades is frequently measured in detail, as "making good around mantels" or gratings, etc. The cutting-out and making good appears at the end of the bill in the form here given. Bough Cast. — 15. As clauses 8 and 10. Lime Whiting and Distempering. — 16 and 17. These appear in the bill in yd. super. In the case of distem- pering, if the colors are in any way special mention this, and also if in dadoes and filling, taking the di- viding line in feet run. Distempering on cornices is usually measured in ft. super., stating the number of tints, and if lines picked out in ft. run ; as is also distempering on enrichments, taking the latter as "extra to," the distempering to cornices being measured over enrichments. 48 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES LATHS GENERALLY. General opinion is undoubtedly in favor of split laths, and split laths are sometimes specified by archi- tects for ceilings and partitions. Sawn laths, unless cut from specially selected straight-grained stuff, would most assuredly have weak places from uneven grain, and in order to avoid this .weakness the sawn laths would have to be made thicker than split laths, and only the best quality should be used. Oak laths, for- merly used, are very liable to warp. The defects that are to be avoided in laths are sap, knots, crookedness, and undue smoothness. The -sap decays; the knots weaken the laths; the crookedness interferes with the even laying on of the stuff, and the undue smoothness does not give sufficient hold for the plaster on the lath. Riven laths, split from the log along its fibres, are stronger than sawn laths, as in the latter process the fibres of the wood are often cut through. Sawn laths are, however, cheaper than riven laths, and have super- 'seded them, which is not desirable in good work. Thick laths, because of the strain upon them, should be used in the ceilings, and the thinner laths should be used in vertical partitions, etc., where the strain is but small. Some walls and partitions have to stand rough usage; in such cases the thicker laths are necessary. Laths are usually spaced with about % in. between them for key. A bunch of laths usually contains 360 lin. ft. and such a bunch nailed with butt joints, covers about 4% super, yd., and requires about 400 nails if the laths are nailed to joists 16 in. from center to center. The length of laths varies from 3 ft. to 4 ft. Laths are best nailed so as to break Joint entirely, because, for various reasons, there is a tendency to crack along the line of the joints BILL OP QUANTITIES 49 if the laths are nailed with the butt ends in a row. This may be obviated by breaking joints; ceilings are much stronger if the laths are nailed in this way. Laths, however, are usually nailed in bays, about 4 ft. or 5 ft. deep. Every lath should be nailed at each end, and also at the place where the lath crosses a joist or stud. Lap joints at the end of laths, which are often made in or- der to save nails, should not be allowed, as this leaves only 14 in- for the thickness of plaster. Butt joints should always be made. Joists, etc., that are thicker than two in., should have small fillets nailed to the un- der side, or be counter lathed, so that the timber surface of attachment may be reduced to a minimum and the key not interfered with. Lathing nails are usually of iron, and are galvanized, cut, wrought, or cast; where oak laths are used, the nails should be oxidized or wrought. Oxidized nails should also be used with white cement work. Zinc nails, which are expensive, are used in very good work, be- cause of the possibility of the discoloration of the plas- ter by the rusting of iron nails. The length of lathing nails depends on the thickness of the laths, % in. nails being used for single laths, and I14 in- nails for double laths. TOOLS AND APPLIANCES USED BY THE PLASTERER. The illustrations shown at Figs. 1 and 2 show a num- ber of tools and appliances made use of by the plas- terer, and others — special — will be shown further on, when it is necessary to describe and illustrate some special process or method of working. The tools the plasterer requires are many and varied, and may be enumerated about as follows: They consist of moulds for running cornices, and center moulds, which may never be used only in the one piece of work, as the de- signs and styles of cornices and centers are continually changing. As these tools do not cost much, however, the changes do not fall heavily on the workman; but it is as well, whenever it can be done, to charge each mould against its own particular job of work. A good spade and shovel will be absolutely necessary to the plasterer's outfit, and will be among the first tools he will require. These should be light and strong, and well handled, or helved; after using they should have all the lime and mortar cleaned off them, and should be placed away where they will not be exposed to the weather. The following list and descriptions of tools will give a new beginner an idea of the kind and character of tools he will be likely to require before he can success- fully carry on the plastering business. Most of these tools will be illustrated further on: The Hoes and Drags. — These are tools so well known that they require no description here. They are used 50 TOOLS AND APPLIANCES 51 52 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES chiefly for mixing hair in the mortar, and for loosening mortar when too "stiff," or when it has. developed a tendency to "set." They are also used for preparing "putty" and fine "stuff." (See Fig. 2.) The Hawk, which is a square , board about thirteen inches square, with a short handle on the under side. It is used for holding stuff while the operator is at work. It is generally made of .pine or some other light wood; it is made thin on the edges, being beveled from the center on the under side to each of the foTir edges; the handle should be about six inches long, and one and a half inches in diameter. The Mortar-Board is a board similar to a table top, and is about forty inches square; it is made by joint- ing two or more boards together, which are secured by two battens, and screws or nails. It is used for holding the mortar delivered from the hod direct by the laborer. Trowels, which are of two kinds : the ordinary trowel, which is formed of light steel four inches wide and about twelve inches long; this is the laying and smooth- ing tool, and is the most important in a plasterer's out- fit. The other is termed a gauging trowel, and is. used for gauging fine stuff for courses, etc. ; it varies in size from three to seven inches in length. Of Floats, which are used for floating, there are three kinds, viz. : the darby, which is not a proper float, is single or double, as may be required; the single being for one man to use, the double for two. The single one should be four feet five inches long, and about four inches wide, with a handle near one end, like a hawk handle, and a cleat near the other end running length- wise of the blade; the long darbys have a hawk handle on each end. The hard float, which is used in finishing, and the quick float, which is used in floating angles. TOOLS AND APPLIANCES 53 H'jint/ float MoiMinS / Tl o n crt Ti s a ;.< 1- o PM 'S 'd g •+^ ii> 13 tS !f» ,4 S +3 o ^ -g ■$ ^ S3 "S) t; d n s g SIS m > ■M c« ;h tS ft g o O U JJ ;i4 ju „ bo ^ a 3 ^ a 3 ■ •a ,Q ." 'd ti •H'-' l^i Ir S . s:!-- si ^i 4J !3-t, (U a L, -t3 a □ v-f H Three samp Grey lime. Water incl quired fo Cement tak in store. Water incl quired fo: c— , — «— ^ «£Bi! T~iT-tl-i . T-I T-I T-I osl-2 '. '. '. ! ■ ! 0 0 0 0 0 0 •^ o^ot^ . ■ .jj +j .^j -4J ■*-» +J nf ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 'oio-* 00*0 i> • t- OO 00 lOlOlO ood o' o' o' ^h T-i rH rH tH W iH tH tH tH • ■ ■ O 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 0 oSi^-B , . , +J 4J +J 4J .*_. +J -)-) -M ■!-* Ills . . . tHCDSOOO-* ■*■*!> . . . 00 OO OS O ® tH too i> C3 T-i tH (M' t-I tH T-lT-id ^ ja boa) u Saa . coa> ■* aso®i>-*-* 8^^ Ireald: eight uareii in lbs tHO ■* t-OOrH-^OJCO i> I> O CO 00 O 05 OO" s^g OS'S m~ oo o loooooeosDoj -T-i :o «■ oi -*■ «■ lo t- lOOWOTflO • rH U3 OS ^i=U - T-l(S (N T-I (N 05 t- t- 00 xVU&''^Vxt>.v:xkT^A*XW »o 4> - V(W>^»Ki»^jfcvjiv.Miy.»foi^i^ici»to».ay^^ Z^^U!>^!~<^^^i^^.X^^-^^-r^y^^.^i^^^^ Elsvation of Corinthian Entablature and Plan of Cornice at Extern vl Angle. PLATK 1 TERMS AND PEOCESSES 143 "square," that is, that the perpendicular parts of mem- bers are plumb with the wall. This may be tested with a plumb bob hanging over the side of the mould, and by- seeing that the line of the plumb bob hangs properly over a marked line which has been previously made by squar- ing off from a square member or by extending a parallel line from an upright member of the mould. When the mould is plumb and square, a mark is made on the ceil- ing screed at the outside part of the nib, and another made on the wall screed at the bottom of the slipper. The same operation. is repeated at the other end of the wall, and the line extended from mark to mark by using a chalk line. The line in this case should be blackened by means of Charcoal or burnt stick, as it shows better than a white line on the light-colored screeds. As the chalk line may sway when striking the wall line, this line should not be trusted for fixing the running rules to. This may be proved by placing the mould every 3 or 4 feet apart in the length of the wall, taking care to keep the outer edge of the nib at the ceiling line; then marking with a gauging trowel at the bottom of the slip- per. Nails are now driven into each of these marks and left projecting as a guide for fixing the running rules. The running rules should not be less than 2% inches wide or more than 3% inches wide and % inch thick, being made out of good redwood or pine planed on both sides and edges. The rules are now fixed into the wall screed either by nailing them to the studs or into the joints of the walls. They are also fixed by wetting one face of the rule and laying dabs of gauged putty and plaster about two feet 6 inches apart. The rules are now pressed on the wall while the stuff is soft, taking care not to force the guide nails out of position. The rules are further secured by laying patches of gauged 144 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES stuff underneath the rule partly on the wall and rule where the dabs are. "When the rules are fixed by nail- ing, it is apt to crack the first-coat of floating, and the joints of the wall are not always easily found. The coarse stuff for the first-coat of cornice brackets should be extra haired and carefully scratched to give a strong foundation for the following coats of gauged stuff, which in many instances is extra thick at bold or projecting parts of the mouldings. For large moulding and wire lathing it is best to leave the brackets uncoated when first coating the general work until the cornice running is commenced, and then to rough out the whole cornice from the lath work with gauged coarse stuff. This gives uniform suction and strength. If the brackets are lathed with wood, they should be first-coated with gauged coarse stuff and scratched before the screeds are formed, so as to allow time for the lath work to settle before the mouldings are roughed out. Weak laths frequently twist by moist- ure from the first-coating, and gradually settle or re- sume their original form during the drying of the first- coating. Leaving the lathed brackets uncoated also forms a vent for the moisture from the wall and ceiling first-coating, thus allowing it to. dry sooner. The coarse stuff for roughing out the cornice should be gauged uni- formly in strength and consistency, as unequal gauging tends to cause unequal swelling in the material, conse- quently the mould is more difficult to run true. The coarse stuff should be laid regular in thickness, taking care to gradually build up and form all thick parts and projecting members with the trowel to prevent the stuff from dropping and the mould froiA dragging it off, as generally happens if the stuff is laid in thick and irregu- lar coats, When roughing out large mouldings with TERMS AND PROCESSES 145 coarse stuff, the members of the mitres should also be filled in and ruled fair before the running with gauged putty is commenced, because when mitring, it will be more easily and quickly done, materials will be saved, and when finished, the whole will be more uniform in color. When all the mouldings are roughed out, the plaster muffle or muffle plate, as the case may be, is taken off, and the running with fine gauged putty commenced. The gauge board and all tools should now be cleaned to free them from grit. A ring of putty is formed on the gauge board, leaving the bottom of the board clear; water is put in the ring and the plaster quickly and evenly sprinkled over the water, taking care not to sprin- kle it on the putty ring. The plaster and water are mixed together by stirring with the point of a trowel. The putty is then quickly mixed with the gauged plaster by using the trowel and turning it over with the hawk. It is put on with a large gauging trowel, or if the mem- bers are large, with the laying trowel, following the form of the mouldings. The mould .is then run along by one man, who also feeds the moulding with any stuff that may gather on the side of the running mould. This operation is continued until all the members of the mouldings are filled out. A thin gauge of fine putty, having less plaster than the previous gauges, is lightly drawn over with a trowel, or brushed over the flat mom- bers, and thrown with a brush for small or dry mem- bers. This mould is then quickly and steadily run along the cornice from beginning to end and finished. If the moulding is extra large in girth, or a long length of moulding has to be run, extra men are required to lay tbe stuff, while two jnay be necessary to run the mould. 146 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES When runniflg small mouldings, say of 10 or 12 inches in girth, one man can run and feed the mould while his partner is laying on. When all the mouldings are run around, the running rules are taken down, the screeds cleaned and scraped, and any holes or defects caused by nails or patches used for the rules made good by fill- ing up with gauged putty. If soap, black lead, or any other materials already mentioned are used to aid and ease the running of the mould, they should be scraped off with a drag as soon as the cornice is run off, other- wise they will prevent the finishing coats for wall and ceiling from adhering to those parts. To Set Out and Construct Corinthian Entablature. — To enable the plasterer to set out a full size or working drawing from the architect's design, also to comprehend , the cornice and the architrave, which are, sometimes used alone or as separate mouldings, their proportions with that of the entire entablature are given. The entabla- ture and the details of the enrichments of the coffers and modrllions are shown on plate. The whole height of the entablature is divided into ten parts, giving three to the architrave, and three to the frieze, and four to the cornice, as shown by the first upright scale at Fig. 1. This figure shows the combined section and elevation of the entablature. The height of the architrave is subdivided into five parts to form its members, as shown by the second upright scale. Projection is taken from the lower fascia, and is equal to one-fourth part of its height. As the cornice of the Corinthian order is frequently used alone as a separate moulding, an enlarged view with figured details is given, see illustration Fig. 4. It is necessary that the details of the cornice should be mastered before proceeding with the entablature, See Plate 1, TERMS AND PROCESSES 147 With regards' to the enrichments of the entablature, as shown in Fig. 1, the whole must be set out and so dis- posed and arranged that the centre of each will be in line with each other, or, in other words, that they are regu- larly disposed perpendicularly above each other, as sho^^^l from A to B (Fig. 1) where it will be seen that the centres of the modillion, dentil, egg, and other bed- mould enrichments are all in one perpendicular line. Enrichments set out in this v/ay are said, in plasterers' parlance, to ' ' principle. ' ' Nothing is more careless, con- fused, and unseemly than to distribute them without any order or principle, as they are in many buildings. The centre of an egg answers in some places of the cor- nice to- the edge of a dentil, in some to the centre, and in others to the space between, all the rest of the enrich- ments being distributed in the same slovenly artless manner. The larger parts must regulate the smaller. All the enrichments in entablatures are governed by the modillions, or mutales, and distribution of these must depend on the interval of the columns, and to be so dis- posed that one of them may come directly over the centre ■of the column, as shown in the present example at C (Fig. 2), the axis of each column. The enrichments must partake of the character of the order they enrich. When the frieze is enriched, and the enrichment may be characteristic of the order, or it may serve to indicate the use of the building, the rank, quali- ties, profession, and achievements of the owner. Hav- ing set out the profile and the enrichments, making the running mould and the running mouldings now claims attention. For large work the cornice and the archi- trave are run separately, the cornice being run from the slipper screed made on the frieze and a nib screed, and the architrave from a slipper screed made on the w^U 148 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES and a nib screed made on the frieze. Sections of the cornice and architrave running moulds are shown at Fig. 4. It may be here remarked that the nib and slipper bearings of the cornice and architrave running moulds are made for work on ceilings and walls; but if the entablature projects or is independent, and supported by columns, the nib of the cornice mould must be cut so as to bear and run on a nib running rule fixed on the weathering of the cornice, and the slipper of the archi- trave running mould cut so as to bear and run oh a running rule fixed on the soffit of the architrave. The frieze, if plain, is set by hand; and if enriched, a bed for the enrichment must be made by running a small part of the bed at the top and bottom of the frieze when running the cornice and architrave mouldings. In this case the screed on the frieze must be set back to allow ■for the plate or ground of the ornament, and the nibs and slippers of the running moulds extended at these parts. In setting out the mould plates an allowance must be made for the bed of the various enrichments, as previously described. The profiles of the three largest enrichments are indi- cated by the dotted lines. The angles of the beds of these enrichments are splayed, as shown, to save fine plaster used for the cast work. This also strengthens the top member of the architrave while it is being run. It will be seen that an in-dentil is used in this cornice, as shown by the dotted line at 1 on the elevation. This is the space between the face or main dentils. The in- dentil is run with the mouldings, and the dentils are cast and planted. The in-dcntil and the dentil may also be cast together in short lengths, and then planted. In this case th$ running mould must b? cut to form a bed TERMS AND PROCESSES 149 for the combined dentils, as indicated by the dotted line on the outside of the section of the running mould. The dotted line on the section of the running mould shows the section of the main dentil. In some, examples the external angles of the bed of the dentils are filled in with an ornament fashioned like a cone or pineapple, instead of using an angle dentil. An enlarged view of this class of ornament fixed in position is shown at Fig. 11. The bed of the small enrichments is made square as shown. When setting out the mould plate, the profile of the soffit of the corona must be taken through the centre of the sunk panel, as shov/n by the shaded part at Fig. 3, thus forming the raised part of the mould as shown at Fig. 4. The most intricate part in the' construction of a Cor- inthian cornice consists in the formation of the coffers, as shown at Fig. 2. This is a plan of the cornice at an external angle. F is a coffer, and M is a modillion or "block," as it is commonly called. The coffer consists of a sunk panel, with an enrichment on the four sides, and a rose or patera in the centre as shown. A section of the coffer is shown at Fig. 3. The coffers are formed by fixing a "style," as from S to S (including the side enrichments)', on the sunk panel, so as to connect the two run plain sides of the soffit and form two sides of the coffer. The lines in the front and back of S and S indicate the joints of the style before they are stopped. It will be understood that the style is fixed before the block is fixed. A plan of the complete style is shown at Fig. 5. When making the model of the style, the side enrichments must be set out mitred and . fixed on the plain part of the style, and a perforation made in the centre to act as a key for the fixing stuff used when fix;ing the block. A mark must also be made in the cen- 150- CEMENTS AND CONCRETES tre of the front of the style to act as a guide when fixing the styles. The model of the style is moulded in wax, taking care to splay the back and front edges and the centre perforation, also the mitres of the enrichments, to allow the mould to draw in one piece. These parts are trimmed square after the styles are cast. Having fixed two styles, the front and back parts of the coffer enrichments, as shown at Figs. 6 and 7, are fixed; then the patera (Fig. 8) is fixed; and then the joints of the styles are stopped, which completes the coffer. This done, the block (Fig. 9) is fixed, and then the small en- richment (Fig. 10) is fixed, thus completing a part of the soffit of the corona. The other parts are of course made and fixed in a similar way, but the positions of the coffers and blocks must be set out on the whole length of the cornice before the fixing is commenced. Setting out coffers and blocks is a simple matter, yet it requires care to ensure accuracy. First fix a coffer and a block in each mitre, as shown at the external mitre (Fig. 2) ; then from the centres of these blocks set out the whole length of the cornice. This is best done by measuring the full length of the cornice from the mitre blocks, and dividing the total by the combined width of one modillion and a coffer, and if there is no remainder, the combined width is marked on the soffit; but if there are a few inches over, they are divided among the given number of blocks. The marks are proved by going over them with a compass or a wood gauge. When the exact positions of the centres of each coffer with the block is ascertained, the marks are extended across the corona and down the plain member on which the back end of the block rests on by the aid of a square. These ex- tended marks or lines give the centres for fixing the styles of the coffers and the blocks. Fixing the coffers TERMS AND PROCESSES 151 and the blocks is the next part of the process. This being done, as already described, taking care to use the centre mark on the coffer as a guide for fixing it fair with the centre lines on the soffit, and using a wood square to prove the square of the style, also using the edge of the square to prove the level of the coffer Avith the run sides of the soffit, then clean off any excess stuff that may exude at the keyhole and edges of the style. After this the back and front side enrichments are fixed, as already mentioned. Before fixing the paterae a keyed or under- cut hole must be cut in the sunk panels to give a key for the stuff that is used for fixing the paterae. A corre- sponding keyed hole must also be formed on the back of the paterae. This is best done by making the desired size of sinking in the model of the paterae before it is moulded. These sinkings must be undercut after the pa- terae are cast. The model of the paterae is generally moulded with a front and back waxed mould. For large paterae, or those having a deep projection a piece of twisted galvanized or copper wire, sufficiently long to enter the keyed holes in the paterae and the soffit, should be inserted in the fixing stuff when fixing the paterae. This method should always be adopted where the bedding s^urface of the pa- terae is small, so as to enable it to resist the weight of a brush while being painted or gilded. If the paterae are extra deep, and project below the line of the soffit, they should be fixed first, otherwise they are liable to get dis- turbed when iixing the blocks and other enrichments. The modillions should be fixed with stiff gauged stuff f6r the keyed holes in the styles, and the corresponding holes in the blocks (which are made while being cast), and using softer gauged stuff for the bedding surface of the block. After the fixing stuff is laid, place the block 152 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES in position, and work it gently but quickly from right to left, so as to force the excess stuff out, and obtain a true and solid bed, taking care that the centre of the block is linable with the centre mark on the sofHt, and using a square to prove the squareness of the block, and then clean off the excess stuff. The small enrichments (Figs. 6, 7, and 10) are fixed with soft gauged stuff, so that they can be easily and quickly fixed. Small cast work of this kind should always be fixed with soft gauged stuff, as there is very little weight to carry until the stuff is set. The suction alone between the two bodies is often suf- ficient to support the cast until the stuff is set. These small enrichments are moulded with a face or front wax mould. Modillions or blocks were formerly cast in three parts, namely, the body, the main part of the leaf, and the tip or curled end of the leaf; the body being 'cast in a wax piece mould (some- times a plaster piece mould) , and the leaf and its tip in a front and back wax mould, but now the complete block is generally cast in one piece in a gelatine mould. The body of the block may be cast in a gelatine mould, but where the back section of the leaf is clear or away from the block near the scroll end, as shown in the accom- panying illustration, and seen in fine old buildings, the leaf should be cast and fixed separately. An enlarged view of the plan and side elevation of a modillion is shown in illustration No. 5. The bed moulds and the other small enrichments in the entablature are generally cast in wax moulds. TERMS AND PROCESSES 153 When fixing the enrichments in an entablature, take special care that they all "principle" with each other as already mentioned, thus forming a pleasing and artis- tic finishj which is characteristic of well-designed mould- ings. 0'.y 5cdc" ^1 -Corinthian Cornice. NO. 6. To Set Out a Corinthian Cornice.— The members which are enriched in the cornice, shown in the preced- ing plate, are drawn as plain members on this cornice so as -to show the profile and method of setting out more clear. 154 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES The combined elevation and profile of the cornice shown at Fig. 1, in the accompanying illustration, No. 6, is an enlarged view of the cornice of the Corinthian en- tablature. The first upright scale contains four parts of the ten into which the whole entablature is divided, as on the preceding plate. The second scale is divided into five parts, the third of which goes to the modillion, the fourth to the corona, and fifth to the cymatium ; the first and second together are divided into three parts, the first for the reversed cyma at the bottom, the second for the dentils, and the third for the ovolo. The smaller mem- bers are in proportion to the greater, as shown by the smaller divisions on the scale. The modillions are 1-6 of the diameter of the column, and their distances two- sixths and a half. Half a diameter is divided on the corona at Fig. 2 into six parts, of which the width of the modillion is two, and the length of it is four. The cap projects 1-3 of those parts, and the distance between the modillions is five. By this rule the exact distance from centre to centre of the modillions is 7-12 of the diameter. The dotted line A C answers to the diminished part of the column, from whence the cornice is projected; the projection being equal to its height, is divided into four parts, as shown by the scale at the bottom of the cor- nice. One-fourth of this scale is divided into six parts, as shown at C, five of which gives the width of the modil- lion. The distance between them is in proportion to it as figured at Fig. 2. The fillets, F F, of the modillion are % of its width, and so is the bead, B. The position and size of the sunk panel are indicated by the dotted lines in the corona at Figs. 1 and 2, the size being ob- tained as shown by the figures in the dotted spaces. The width of the dentils, D, is obtained by dividing the semi- diameter of the column marked oja the co/ona at Fig. 2 TERMS AND PROCESSES 155 into fourteen parts, two of which gives the width of the dentil, and one the space between them. This space of course is also the width of the in-dentil, the height of which is one-fourth of the height of the main dentil, as indicated by the small division on the inner side of the second upright scale. The centres and radius for describing the profiles of the cymatium or cymarecta, the ovolo, and the inverted cyma or ogee members are indicated by small crosses and dotted lines.. Mitring. — Mitriag is looked upon by the generality of plasterers as a test of speed and ability. As they gener- ally work in pairs on other portions of the work, their in- dividual ability is not easily seen, but when mitring a man carries the operation through alone. Mitring being done by hand, is a near approach to modelling, and is an operation of which a dexterous and good plasterer is nat- urally proud. The quality and time required for mitres greatly depend upon the degree of hardness of the run cornice, also upon the suction. A mitre can be more freely worked and more expeditiously done on a hard cornice surface, and where there is a suction. The extra absorbing powers of brick walls as compared to lath par- titions cause the gauged stuff to get firm sooner, and enables the mouldings to be more readily blocked out be- fore the stuff is set. A common error when mitring is gauging the stuff stronger than that which has been used ■ for the running of the cornice, causing extra swelling and difficulty of ruling the members over, and cutting the run part of the cornice with the joint rule, especially if the stuff sets before the plasterer has had time to rule all the members over, and then being stronger, and con- sequently setting quicker, he has not so much time for forming the members. Ordinary sized mitres can be 156 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES done with one gauge by using less plaster than in the gauge for running the cornice, and stiffening the greater portion with dry plaster, and using this for roughing out the mitre ; then using the soft portion left for brushing over the members and filling up all holes, and afterwards working the joint rule over the metal to take the su- perfluous stuff off. Should the mitre not be fine enough, the gauged stuff can be further softened on the hawk by adding water, and working it with the gauging trowel, brushing the soft or creamy stuff all over the mitre again, then working the joint rule again. Small mem- bers, and those at the top and bottom of the cornice, where there is most absorption, should be worked by the joint rule first, leaving the large members, drips or coves, or where there is a large bcdy of stuff, to be ruled over last. The joint rule should always be worked horizon- tally, especially when dealing with beads and earvettos. Drips and large members should be worked with the joint rule with an upright motion, because if worked down, the stuff may be pulled down. Mitres should not be worked, fined, or tooled with small tools, as they can and should be brought to a good and straight surface by the proper use of the joint rule. Small tools should only be used for laying the stuff when required, and cleaning out the intersections of the mitres, quirks, and for stopping. A square-ended small tool may be used for smoothing flat, straight surfaces. Returned mitres and short breaks are "run down," then cut to the re- quired lengths and planted. They may also be mitred by hand. Mitre-Mould. — ^Various attempts have been made to construct a running mould that would form the mitres simultaneously with the cornice running. Most plasterers will have heard of, and some may have tried to make TERMS AND PROCESSEg 157 and work a mitre-mould to save hand labor. Those who have tried it will have found the results far from satis- factory. The subjoined illustration, No. 7, shows the method of setting out and constructing a mould intended -Mitre-Mould. NO. 7. for forming the moulding and mitres in one operation. The mould is made by fixing the metal plate at an angle of 45 degrees on the slipper, or in other words fixing the iron plate at one angle of a square slipper, which allows the mould to run nearly up to the angle, one face of the slipper being used for one side of the wall, and the other 158 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES face at right angles being used for the other side of the wall. Fig. 1 shows the method of setting out the profile of mould. A is a given section of a moulding, and B is the section of the moulding at the mitre. To obtain this, first draw the moulding A full size, and then extend the ceiling line and draw another wall line. Then from the projection of the top member draw an angle line at 45 degrees. Carry up the projections of the various members to the angle (or mitre line) and then draw hori- zontal lines from the various members; also centre lines of large members as from a to 1 (the vertical letters). Take off the lines a to 1 (diagonal letters) on the angle line, and set them on the ruling line from a to 1 (hori- zontal letters), and then laying them down to the hori- zontal lines, the intersections give the profile for the mitre-mould. Fig. 2 shows a side elevation of the mitre- mould, and Fig. 3 shows a front elevation. It will be seen that the mitre-mould is an expensive and unsatis- factory fad. The time expended in setting out the elon- gated members, making an extra mould, and cleaning out the intersection by hand (as the mould does not leave a finished mitre), also making good the parts broken by drawing out the mould from interlocked or undercut members in the moulding, is not repaid. An average plasterer would put in all the mitres of an ordinary sized room while the mould was being made. The mould will only run into every second angle, and must be -taken off and reversed to fit the next. It may seem a waste of time and space to describe and then show the utter use- lessness of a mitre-mould, but having met many plas- terers who stated that they had used or had seen a mitre- mould that worked wonders, I am constrained to give a description, not only to save future futile controversy, but to show that in this book tlie much-debated trade TERMS AND PROCESSES 159 subject has not been omitted. In concluding this sub- ject, it may be stated that not any one of the mitre-mould plasterers would or could practically explain the modus operandi of this mysterious m^ould. Fixing Enrichments. — Enrichments should be fixed straight, square, plumb, and firm. Cornice enrichments, such as bed moulds, friezes, &c., for which a bed or sink- ing to receive them is formed by the running mould, do not require such strong gauges stuff as soffits, medallions, or other hanging casts. For light enrichments the gauged putty and plaster should never be stronger than that used for the cornice, and clean strong size water should be used. This gives more time for fixing a number of easts, and improves the cementing force. The bed for the cast work should be scratched, dusted, and wetted before the cast work is applied. A small portion of fine plaster (the same as used for casting the enrichments) should be gauged with clean size water, to be used for the joints. The gauged fixing stuff should be spread evenly over the back of the^ cast and over the scratched bed of the moulding. No more should be laid on than will fully fill up the scratches. Then place a small piece of the white or joint gauge on the point, and press the cast into position by gently but quickly sliding the cast twice or thrice backwards and forwards to expel the air and incorporate the two bodies. It is a mistake to dab a lump of gauged stuff at random on the back of the cast and press it on the bed, as the stuff does not properly enter the scratched part of the bed, and the contained air prevents proper cohesion and solidity. When too thick a coat of stuff is laid on the coat, straight and even fixing is more difficult. The excess stuff oozes out at the sides, and unless time and care be taken in cleaning it off, the moulding, or cast, or both, get damaged. A 160 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES small portion may also ooze out in the first method, but it will be so thin that it can be brushed off while soft. When fixing medallion blocks or trusses, a dovetailed hole should be cut in the vertical and horizontal parts of the bed, and similar holes in the blocks (which are made when being cast) are filled in with gauged stuff and applied in position. If the cast should be very heavy, or of Portland cement, it is further secured by inserting a slate or iron dowel while the stuff is soft, allowing a portion of the dowel to project to enter into the body of the cast. Heavy casts should be temporarily supported by wood props until the fixing stuff is set. "When fix- ing heavy casts the plain Surface of the plaster work should be cut as far as the lath to obtain a better and stronger key. The putty in the fixing stuff should be mixed with long strong hair or tow, as described for rib mouldings or ceilings. Hair or tow may also be used advantageously in fixing Portland or other cement work. Cast work, when extremely heavy, should be further se- cured by means of long screws or bolts, placed so as to pass through the cast work and into the timber, the casts being bedded with gauged haired stuff and tem- porarily propped up. The screws or bolts should be fixed before the stuff is set to a^void the probable dis- turbance of the gauged bedding. Before fixing any cast work they should be placed in position to prove their correct fitting. Centre, side and end lines should be made on the surface of the bed to give a guide for fix- ing. It may be necessary to fix nails at intervals in the lines to give a further guide. Mitring Enrichments. — Before fixing continuous or space cast work, the length and width of the panel or room should be set out to prove that the mitres are equal- sided, balanced and have flowing lines. Nothing looks TERMS AND PROCESSES 161 so slovenly or unworkmanlike as a mitre in an ornament cut haphazard, with the leading stem disjointed or springing out of a flower or tendril. If the design is vertical, say a bed mould or frieze with an alternate leaf and husk, what can be more offensive to artistic taste than a part of the leftf on one side and a part of the husk on the other side of the mitre ! There is no ex- cuse for this want of taste and wanton treatment. A little time expended in setting out the' work will obviate these defects. "Where there are no shrinking and stretch- ing easts the mitres can be eased by stretching or shrink- ing the cast work at the joints. Stretching or shrinking are evils, and it depends on the design of the enrich- ments which of the two is the lesser, but in most instances shrinking is the greater evil. Shrinking does not require so much labor to make the joints good. Stretching does not show quite so much, especially if the joint is well modelled and of the same color. It also gives greater scope and freedom. It has already been mentioned that in good shops the breaks or other short lengths are set out in the shop and that there are stretching and shrink- ing casts and mitres modelled and made to facilitate the formation of good mitres. This latter method is cer- tainly the cheapest and most satisfactory in the end. The setting out is best done by cutting a lath as a gauge to the length of the cast and marking the length of each cast temporarily on the bed of the cast work from mitre to mitre. When the mitre has been determined on and the casts set out to come in, the marks are made more distant to give a guide for fixing each separate cast as required. It is better to measure thrice .than alter twice. Space ornaments should also be set out accurately, but there is no diflculty in the mitres, as the intervening 162 CEMENTS AND CONCHETES space between each cast can be increased or diminished as required. When tixing medallion blocks, dentils or paterae, the mitres should be fixed first and then the spaces and posi- tions set out. Special care must be taken when mitring enrichments with distinctive vertical parts, such as fig- ures, or pendants of flowers, or fruit in friezes, that the cast work is not unequally or irregularly scratched so as to enable them to come to an equally balanced mitre at the angles. Where there are no stretchers the cast work should be cut between the main vertical parts, so that the joint on each side will be equal, or, in other words, that the vertical parts will be equidistant from the main or other parts when fixed. The same remarks apply to shrinking. The mitres of running enrichments, such as soffits, etc., are made up with bands or ribbons, which are east or worked in situ by hand. The latter way is the quickest and most artistic. Another plan is to fix paterae or drops at the internal and external mitres. The scroll work of the enrichment is then formed to spring from, the paterae and finish at the patera at the next mitre. Sometimes the inner member at each side of the soffit is worked across at right angles at each mitre, thus forming a small square sinking or panel, which is then filled in with a patera or drop. Bed moulds, such as an egg and dart, have internal and external mitre leaf modelled and cast. This is a neat and quick way of forming mitres. A good cornice, with well-modelled and effective ornament, maj' be disfigured and spoiled by careless mitring, yet it is as easy (and in many cases more so) to make good and satisfactory -work. It is therefore best to set out correctly and make sure of a correct finish before beginning to fix. Illustra- TERMS AND PROCESSES 163 tion No. 8 shows the method of mitring various forms of fret enrichments. Pugging. — Pugging or deafening is a body of plastic materials laid on boards fixed between the joists of a floor, or lath and plaster partitions. It is intended to prevent sound and smells from passing from one room to another. Pugging is generally performed by laying a thick coat of coarse stuff on a foundation of rough boards on fillets, which are nailed on the sides of the joints. Chopped hay, straw or ferns, mixed with lime, is (M fi > 2 $s Ol OS CO 00 U5 ■* tH a ft o cq ■* 05 ■* t^ lo 05 1 Sl lo (M th cq th oq "S-*-! o°„- 1 O C3QQ i ■* TO T-; OS OS rH i 2 ■* 00 us to to to 1 OS rH t- US US 1 c ,s^ r a'*s to rH to r-l 00 US 1 - s ° i-l rH rH iH f ctntirtfmvn J> -Sections of the various Parts of the Stable Floors SHOWN ON Illustration NO. 4. NO. 5. Concrete Slab Moulds. — Slab moulds are made with 1% inch boards ledged together. On this ground, wood sides and ends (each being 2^^ inches by 2 inches, or 3 inches by 3 inches, according to the desired thickness of slab) are fixed. One side and end is held in position with thumb screws, which fit into iron sockets, so that they can be unscrewed to relieve the slab when set. The bottom and the sides and ends are lined with strong iron or zinc plates. 330 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES Slab Making. — Slabs are mostly made by machinery. The materials are 1 part of Portland cement mixed dry with 21/2 parts of crushed granite and slag in equal pro- portions that have been washed and passed through a 14 inch sieve. They are thoroughly incorporated together in a horizontal cylinder worked by machinery, a mini- mum of water being added, and the mixing continued until the mass is well gauged. The mould, which has been previously oiled, is placed on a shaking machine known as a " trembler " or " dither, ' ' which gives a rapid vertical jolting motion to the mould and its contents! A small portion of "slip," that is, neat cement, is ^ laid round the angles. The machine is then started, and the concrete laid on the mould by small shovelfuls at a time, a man with a trowel spreading it over the mould until full. The surface is then ruled off. If both sides of the slabs are required for use, the upper surface is trowelled. The whole operation of mixing, filling in, and ruling off takes about seven minutes. The filled moulds are re- moved and allowed to stand for about three days. The slabs are then taken out, and stacked on edge and air- dried for about five days. They are then immersed in a silicate bath for about seven days, and are afterwards taken out and stacked in the open air until it is required for use. They should not be used until three months old. Paving slabs are also made by hand, by ramming and beating the moist concrete into the mould with an iron hand-float. Powerful ramming, trituration, or vio- lent agitation of the gauged material in the mould, tend to consolidate concrete, and it is possible to further in- crease homogeneity by the use of hydraulic pressure. Induration Concrete Slabs. — The surface of concrete slabs or other work exposed to friction or wear may be HOW TO USE THEM 331 hardened by soaking in a silicate solution. Silicate of soda has a great affinity for the materials of which con- crete is composed, and by induration causes the surface to become hard, dense, and non-porous. The silicate of soda and potash is known as soluble glass or dissolved flint. The soluble silicate is a clear viscous substance made from pure flint and caustic soda, which is digested by heat under pressure indigester. Its strength is technically known as 140 degrees, which shows 1,700 on a hygrometer. When used as a bath for concrete, it is diluted with water, the proportion vary- ing from 6 to 10 parts of water to one of silicate. Con- crete pavements, laid in situ, may also be hardened by washing with silicate solution. They should not be sili- cated until two days after being laid, to allow the mois- ture to evaporate and the silicate to penetrate. Mosaic. — The art of making mosaic is at the present time scarcely within the province of plasterers, but in former times many kinds were made in situ or in slabs by plasterers. The subdivision of labor has to a great extent caused mosaic-making to be confined to special- ists. Concrete is still made by plasterers. A brief de- scription of this and other kinds may prove_ useful as well as interesting, especially to plasterers who are in the habit of fixing tiles and working in concrete. Mosaic is the art of producing geometrical, fioral, or figured de- signs, by the joining together of hard stones, marbles, earthenware, glass, or artificial stone, either naturally or artificially colored. The term "mosaic" embraces a wide range of artistic processes and materials for the decoration of floors, walls, ceilings. The Egyptians were experts in mosaic. The Cairo worker as a rule had no drawings made beforehand, but the mosaic design was 532 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES constructed by the artist as he arranged the pieces on the ground. The mosaic pavements of Cairo are of a slightly different character from those used for wall decoration, and are generally composed entirely of mar- ble tesserae (and sometimes red earthenware) of larger size than the delicate pieces included iii wall mosaics. They are arranged to form geometrical patterns within a space of about two feet square. Each square slab is made separately, and the pieces are set, not in plaster, but in a composition of lime and clay impervious to water. The clay must be unbumt, just as it comes from the pit. Saracenic mosaic in Egypt is a. combination of the tesselated method with a large proportion of sectile mosaic. The Romans also were great workers in mosaic. The mosaics of Byzantium and Ravenna consisted of cubes of opaque and colored glass. The general method used here for pavement mosaic is as follows : The repeated design is traced on stout paper and small pieces of marble, or more often tile, are gummed on the paper, following the design of form and color, one piece at a time (with the smooth face down- wards) being laid until the design is completed. The mosaic slabs, which are thus temporarily kept in posi- tion, are sent to the building and laid where intended. A rough concrete foundation, which has previously been made level, is then floated with Portland or Keen's cement, and the slabs with paper are then damped and drawn off, and any openings or defects filled up with small pieces of the same form and color as the design. The slabs are made in various sizes according to the de- sign. For instance, a border 12 inches wide may be made from 3 to 6 inches long. When laying the slabs, it is best to begin at the centre and work outwards, and any ex- HOW TO USE THEM 333 cess or deficiency taken off or made up in the plain part of the border at the walls. The tiles are made at pottery works in the required sizes and colors. The thickness is generally about 14 inch and the average surface size about 1/2 inch. Females are often employed fixing the pieces on the paper. The designs of coats of arms, mono- grams, dates, figures, flowers, and foliage are effectively produced by this simple and cheap process. Concrete Mosaic. — All mosaics are more or less -of a concretive nature, and the trade term of "concrete mo- saic" is due to the fact that the matrix used is Portland or other cement gauged with the marble aggregate, and laid in most cases in a similar manner as ordinary con- crete. Concrete mosaic is extensively used for paving halls, corridors, conservatories, terraces, &c. It is also used for constructing steps, landings, baths, pedestals, &c. Slabs and tiles made of this class of mosaic for paving purposes are slowly but surely proving a for- midable rival to Italian mosaic encaustic tiles. It can be made in larger sections, thus facilitating rapidity of laying. It is more accurate in form, durable, non-slip- pery, and cheaper. The last reason alone is a favorable item in this keen age of competition. Where marble has been scarce, broken tiles, pottery, colored glass, flints, white spar, &c., have been used as aggregate. If the marble chips are obtainable as a waste, and near the place of manufacture, the primary cost is small. If the moulds are of metal, and made in sections so as to form a series of moulds in one case, and the casts are pressed by means of a hydraulic power, the cost of production is reduced to a minimum. If the casts are polished in large num- bers by machinery on a revolving table, the total cost is further reduced. For local purposes they can be made 334 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES by hand at a medium cost. Slabs are made in almost any size, but generally from 4 to 6 feet superficial. The thickness varies from 1 to 1% inches. Tiles are usually _ made about 10 inches square and 1 inch thick. The tiles are generally made with a face of cement and white mar- ble, or white and black marble chippings. They are backed up with a cheaper aggregate. Various tints of the face matrix are obtained by mixing the cement with metallic ovides. The tiles are made in wood or metal moulds, with metal strips to form the divisions of form and color in the design. If the design is fret pattern, the gauged material is put in between the strips that form the band of the fret. When the stuff is nearly set, the strips are taken out, and the other part filled in with another color. Sometimes the band or running designs are cast in a separate mould, and when set placed in posi- tion in a larger mould, and the ground filled in, cover- ing and binding the whole in one tile. Another plan is to lay a thin coat of cement on the face of the mould, forming the design with small marble chips by hand, by pressing the marble into the cement as desired. When it is firm, it is backed up with the ordinary stuff, and when set, they are ground and polished. Concrete Mosaic Laid "in Situ." — Pavements for halls, passages,- shops, landings, &c., are also done in situ. A rough concrete foundation is first laid fair to falls and levels within % inch of the finished surface line. This % inch space is to receive the plastic marble mo- saic. The main or centre part is generally done first and the border last. This allows a walking space or bearing for boards, laid from side to side to work on when laying the centre. A plank sufficiently strong to keep one or two crossboards from touching the work is HOW TO USE THEM 335 ^ laid along each side. On the side planks the crossboards are laid, and mOved about when required. The width of the border is marked on the floor, and wood screed rules laid level to the marks to form a fair joint line for the border, also as a screed when floating the centre part. The screed rules are generally fixed with a gauge plaster, which is quicker than fixing on gauged cement. After the centre is laid, the plaster should be carefully swept off, and the concrete well wetted before the border is laid. The marble and cement is gauged in the proportion of 2 of marble to 1 of cement, and laid flush with screeds, laying and beating it in position with a long wood hand- float. The surface is ruled in from screed to screed with a straight-edge. The surface is then ironed with a lay- ing trowel until it is smooth and fair. If the marble does not show, or is not regular, or is insufficient, the bare parts are fllled in with marble by hand. When marble is scarce, the ^ inch of the top surface is laid in two coats, the first being composed of cement and a cheaper aggregate, silch as broken stone, tiles, &c., and gauged in the same proportion as the upper or marble coat. It is laid about 14 inch thick, and when it is firm, but not set, the marble coat is laid as before directed. The first coat saves the marble, and being firm, tends to keep the marble in the upper coat from sinking. The top coat is sometimes sprinkled over with fine marble chips by hand or through a fine sieve, then pressed into the surface and ironed with a laying trowel. Before ironing the surface, care should be taken that the chips are equally distributed, also that their flat surfaces are uppermost, and that the matrix and chips are perfectly solid and free from ridges and holes. After the centre is laid and the screeds removed, the border is laid in a 336 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES similar way. If there are two or more colors or forms in the border, the divisions are formed with narroiv screeds rules, and arranged so that as many as practicable can be laid at the same time. This allows the various parts to set at one time, and saves waiting for each separate part to set. The screed rules for circular work or angles are formed with strong gauged plaster and then oiled. The marble chips are either broken by hand or in a stone-breaking machine. The chips vary in size from 1-10 to ^ inch. The best colors for borders are a black matrix with white marble or spar chips, or a white matrix with black marble chips. The white matrix is obtained by mixing the marble dust (produced when breaking the marble into chips) with a light colored Portland cement. The centres can be made in various tints, but the most general is a warm red, which is ob- tained by mixing the cement with red oxide. Cement colored with red oxide should be laid first, as it is liable to stain other parts of a lighter color. When the centre and border are laid, the floor is left until the whole is perfectly, set and hard, and it is then fit to polish. This is done by means of a stone polisher, water and marble dust, or fine slag powder. The stone polisher is a piece of hard stone from 8 to 12 inches square, and about 3 inches thick, into which an. iron ring is inserted and se- cured with lead. A wooden handle from 4 to 6 feet long, with an iron hook at one end, is inserted into the ring, so that the handle is firm on the stone, yet has sufficient play to be moved freely backwards and forwards. The polishing should not be attempted until the stuff is thor- oughly set, because the polishing will destroy the face of the cement, and cause a vast amount of extra labor in grinding the surface down until free from holes, Small HOW TO USE THEM 337 parts of the gauged stuff should be set aside as tests for determining when the stuff is set. Concrete mosaic, where economy is desirable, will make a strong, durable, and waterproof floor, and an excellent substitute for higher class mosaics. A Bulletin (No. 235), prepared by P. S. Wormley for the U. S. government on cement, mortar, and concrete, from which I quote at length, contains some excellent in- formation and instructions on the preparation and the use of the above materials. This bulletin is intended for free distribution and may be obtained by making appli- cation to the U. S. Department of Agriculture, Wash- ington, D. C. Storing Cement. — In storing cement care must be ex- ercised to insure its being kept dry. When no house or shed is available for the purpose, a rough platform may be erected clear of the ground, on which the cement may be placed and so covered as to exclude water. When properly protected, it often improves with age. Cement is shipped in barrels or bags, the size and weight of which usually are given. Cement Mortar. — Cement mortar is an intimate mix- ture of cement and sand mixed with sufficient water to produce a plastic mass. The amount of water will vary according to the proportion and condition of the sand, and had best be determined independently in each case. Sand is used both for the sake of economy and to avoid cracks due to shrinkage of cement in setting. Where great strength is required, there should be at least suffi- cient cement to fiU the voids or air spaces in the sand, and a slight excess is preferable in order to compensate for any uneven distribution in mixing. Common propor- tions for Portland cement mortar are 3 parts sand to 1 y38 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES of cement, and for natural cement mortar, 2 parts sand to 1 of cement. Unless otherwise stated, materials for mortar or concrete are considered to be proportioned by volume, the cement being slightly shaken in the measure used. A "lean" mortar is one having only a small propor- tion of cement, while a "rich" mixture is one with a large proportion of cement. "Neat" cement is pure cement, or that with no admixture of sand. The term ' ' aggregate ' ' is used to designate the coarse materials en- tering into concrete — usually gravel or crushed rock. The proportion in which the three elements enter into the mixture is usually expressed by three figures sepa- rated by dashes— as, for instance, 1-2-5, meaning 1 part cement, 2 parts sand, and 5 parts aggregate. In the great majority of cases cement mortar is subjected only to compression, and for this reason it would seem nat- ural that, in testing it, to determine its compressive strength. The tensile strength of cement mortar, how- ever, is usually determined, and from this its resistance to compression may be assumed to be from 8 to 12 times greater. A direct determination of the compressive strength is a less simpk operation, for which reason the tensile test is in most cases accepted as indicating the strength of the cement. Mixing. — In mixing cement mortar it is best to use a platform of convenient size or a shallow box. First, de- posit the requisite amount of sand in a uniform layer, and on top of this spread the cement. These should be mixed dry with shovels or hoes, until the whole mass ex- hibits a uniform color. Next, form a crater of the dry mixture, and into this pour nearly the entire quantity of water required for the batch. Work the dry material HOW TO USE THEM 339 from the outside toward the centre, until all the water is taken up, then turn rapidly with shovels, adding water at the same time by sprinkling until the desired consist- ency is attained. It is frequently specified that the mor- tar shall be turned a certain number of times, but a bet- ter practice for securing a uniform mixture is to watch the operation and judge by the eye when the mixing has been carried far enough. In brick masonry the mis- take is frequently made of mixing the mortar very wet and relying upon the bricks to absorb the excess of water. It is better, however, to wet the brick thoroughly and use a stiff mortar. Grout. — The term "grout" is applied to mortar mixed with an excess of water, which gives about the consist- ency of cream. This material is often used to fill the voids in stone-masonry, and in brick work the inner por- tions of walls are frequently laid dry and grouted. The practice in either ease is to be condemned, except where the conditions are unusual, as cement used in this way will never develop its full strength. Lime and Cement Mortar. — ^L. C. Sabin finds that in Portland cement mortar containing three parts sand to 1 of cement, 10 per cent, of the cement may be replaced by lime in the form of paste without diminishing the strength of the mortar, and at the same time rendering it more plastic. In the case of natural cement mortar, lime may be added to the extent of 20 to 25 per cent, of the cement with good results. The increased plasticity due to the addition of lime much facilitates the operation of laying bricks, and has caused lime and cement mortar to be largely used. Cement Mortar for Plastering. — In plastering with CCTient, a few precautions must be observed to insure 340 CEMENTS AND CONCEETES good and permanent results. The surface to receive the, plaster should be rough, perfectly clean, and well satu- rated with water. A mortar very rich in cement is rather a drawback than otherwise on account of shrink- age cracks, which frequently appear. The mortar, con- sisting of two or three parts sand to one of cement, should be mixed with as little water as possible and well worked to produce plasticity. It is essential that the plaster be kept moist until it has thoroughly hardened. Materials for Making Concrete Sand. — In securing sand for mixing mortar or concrete, if it is possible to select from several varieties, that sand should be chosen which is composed of sharp, angular grains, varying in size from coarse to fine. Such sand is, however, not always obtainable, nor is it essential for good work. Any coarse-grained sand which is fairly clean will answer the purpose. If gravel, sticks, or leaves be present they should be removed by screening. The voids in sand vary from 30 to 40 per cent., according to the variation in size of grains. A sand with difEerent-sized grains is to be preferred, because less cement is required to fill the voids. By mixing coarse and fine sand it is possible to reduce the voids considerably. It is customary to use the terms "river sand," "sea sand," or "pit sand," according to the source of the supply. River sand as a rule has rounded grains, but unless it contains an excess of clay or other impunties, it is suitable for general purposes. When river sand is of a light color and fine-grained it answers well for plaster- ing. Sea sand may contain the salts found in the ocean. The tendency of these salts to attract moisture makes it HOW TO USE THEM 341 advisable to wash sea sand before using it for plastering or other work which is to be kept perfectly dry. Pit sand for the most part will be found to have sharp, angular grains, which make it excellent for mor- tar or concrete work. Where clay appears in pockets It is necessary either to remove it, or else see that it is thoroughly mixed with the sand. The presence of clay in excess frequently makes it necessary to wash pit sand before it is suitable for use. The results of tests made in this laboratory would in- dicate that the presence of clay, even in considerable amounts, is a decided benefit to "lean" mortars, whereas it does not appreciably affect the strength of a rich, mixture. Gra/vel. — It is important that gravel for use in con- crete should be clean, in order that thecement may prop- erly adhere to it, and form a strong and compact mass. As with sand, it is well to have the pieces vary in size, thereby reducing the voids to be filled with mortar. The voids in general range from 35 to 40 per cent. Crushed Stone. — The best stone for concrete work con- sists of angular pieces, varying in size and having a clean, rough surface. Some form of strong and durable rock is to be preferred, such as limestone, trap, or gran- ite. The total output of the crusher should be used be- low a maximum size, depending upon the nature of the work in hand. All material under % inch will act as so much sand and should be considered as such in propor- tioning the mixture. Precautions must be taken to in- sure a uniform distribution of the smaller pieces of stone, otherwise the concrete will , have an excess of fine ma- terial in some parts and a deficiency in others. 342 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES Less than 8 per cent, of clay will probably not seri- ously impair the strength of the concrete, provided the stones are not coated with it, and may even prove a benefit in the case of lean mixtures. The voids in crushed stone depend upon the shape and variation in size of pieces, rarely falling below 40 per cent., unless much fine material is present, and in some cases reaching 50 per cent. A mixture of stone and gravel in equal parts makes an excellent aggregate for concrete. Stone Versus Gravel. — It would appear from tests that crushed stone makes a somewhat stronger concrete than gravel, but the latter is very extensively used with uni- formly good results. This superiority of stone over gravel for concrete work is attributed to the fact that the angular pieces of stone interlock more thoroughly than do the rounded pebbles, and offer a rougher surface to the cement. A point in favor of gravel concrete is that it requires less tamping to produce a compact mass than in the case of crushed stone. Then, too, the proportion of voids in stone being usually greater than in gravel, means a slight increase in the cost of concrete. Cinders. — Cinders concrete is frequently used in con- nection with expanded metal and "other forms of rein- forcement for floor construction, and for this purpose it is well adapted on account of its light weight. Its poros- ity makes it a poor conductor of heat and permits the driving of nails. Only hard and thoroughly burned cin- ders should be used, and the concrete must be mixed quite soft so as to require but little tamping and to avoid crushing the cinders. Cinder concrete is much weaker, both in tension and compression, than stone or gravel concrete, and for this reason admits only of light rein- forcement. HOW TO USE THEM 343 Concrete. — General Discussion: Cement concrete is the product resulting from an intimate mixture of cement mo'rtar- with an aggregate of crushed stone, gravel, or similar material. The aggregate is crushed or screened to the proper size as determined from the char- acter of the work. In foundation work, stone or gravel 3 inches in size may be used to advantage, whereas in the case of moulded articles of small sectional area, such as fence posts, hollow building blocks, &c., it is best to use only such material as will pass a % inch screen. An ideal concrete, from the standpoint of economy, would be that in which all voids in the aggregate were com- pletely filled with sand, and all the voids in the sand completely filled with cement, without any excess. Un- der these conditions there would be a thoroughly com- pact mass and no waste of materials. It is a simple matter to determine the voids in sand and also in the aggregate, but in mixing concrete the proportions vary a great deal, depending in each case upon the nature of the work and the strength desired. For example, in the construction of beams and flour pan- els, where maximum strength with minimum weight is desired, a rich concrete should be used, whereas in mas- sive foundation work, in which bulk or weight is the controlling factor, economy would point to a lean mix- ture. When good stone or gravel is used, the strength of the concrete depends upon the strength of the mortar em- ployed in the mixing and the proportion of mortar to aggregate. For a given mortar the concrete will be strongest when only enough mortar is used to fill the voids in the aggregate, less strength being obtained by using either greater or less proportion. In practice it is 344 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES usual to add a slight excess of mortar over that required to 'fill the voids in the aggregate. It is more accurate to measure cement by weight un- less the unit employed, be the barrel or sack, because when taken from the original package and measured in bulk there is a chance of error due to the amount of shaking the cement receives. As it is less convenient, however, to weigh the cement, it is more usual to measure it by volume, but for the reasons stated this should be done with care. Proportioning Materials. — For an acfeurate determina- tion of the best and most economical proportions where maximum strength is required, it is well to proceed in the following way: First, proportion the cement and sand so that the cement paste will be 100 per cent, in ex- cess of the voids in sand; next, determine the voids in the aggregate and allow sufficient mortar to fill all voids, with an excess of 10 per cent. To determine roughly the voids in gravel or crushed stone prepare, a water-tight box of convenient size and fill with the material to be tested, shake well and smooth off even with the top. Into this pour water until it rises flush with the surface. The volume of water added, divided by the volume of the box, measured in the same units, represents the proportion of voids. The propor- tion of voids in sand may be more accurately determined by subtracting the weight of a cubic foot of packed sand from 165, the weight of a cubic foot of quartz, and divid- ing the difference by 165 degrees. The following will serve as an example of proportion- ing materials: Assume voids in packed sand to measure 38 per cent., and voids in packed stone to measure 48 per cent. Cement p^te required per cubic foot of sand, HOW TO USE THEM 345 0.38 and 1-10 equals 0.42 cubic foot, approximately. By trial, 1 cubic foot of loose cement, lightly shaken, makes 0.85 cubic foot of cement paste, and requires . ^^ or 2 cubic feet of sand, approximately, producing an amount of mortar equal to 0.85 and 2 (1-0.38) equals 2.09 cubic feet. Mortar required per cubic foot of stone equals 0.48, and 1-10x0.48 equals 0.528 cubic foot. There- fore 2.09 cubic feet mortar will require g^ equals 4 cubic feet of stone, approximately. The proportions are therefore 1 part cement, 2 parts sand, 4 parts stone. Although such a determination is usually considered un- necessary in practical work, it may be of sufficient inter- est to justify giving it. For general use the following mixtures are recom- mended : 1 cement, 2 sand, 4 aggregate, for very strong and impervious; 1 cement, 2% sand, 5 aggregate, for ordinary work requiring moderate strength; 1 cement, 3 sand, 6 aggregate, for work where strength is of minor importance. Aggregate Containing Fine Material. — In the case of gravel containing sand, or crushed stone from which the small articles have not been removed by screening, the amount of such fine sand or fine stone should be deter- mined and due allowance made for it in proportioning the mortar. When mixing an aggregate containing small particles with mortar, and in reality we have a mortar containing a larger proportion of sand than was present before the aggregate was incorporated. It is evident, then, that in such cases the quality of richness of the mortar should depend upon the proportion of fine material in the ag- gregate. 346 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES For example, suppose that 1 cubic foot of gravel con- tains 0.1 cubic foot of sand, and that the voids in gravel with sand screened out measure 40 per cent. For gen- eral purposes this would suggest a 1-2-5 mixture, but since each cubic foot contains 0.1 cubic foot sand, 5 cubic feet gravel will contain 0.5 cubic foot sand, and the proportions should be changed to 1 part cement, 1^ parts sand, 5 parts gravel. Mechanical Mixers. — It has been demonstrated that concrete can be mixed by machinery as well, if not bet- ter, than by hand. Moreover, if large quantities of con- crete are required, a mechanical mixer introduces marked economy in the cost of construction. None of the various forms of mechanical mixers will be described here, since concrete in small quantities, as would be used on the farm, is more economically mixed by hand. Mixing by Hand. — In mixing by hand a platform is constructed as near the work as is practicable, the sand and aggregate being dumped in piles at the side. If the work is to be continuous, this platform should be of suf- ficient size to accommodate two batches, so that one batch can be mixed as the other is being deposited. The ce- ment must be kept under cover and well protected from moisture. A convenient way of measuring the materials is by means of a bottomless box or frame made to hold the exact quantities needed for a batch. A very common and satisfactory method of mixing concrete is as follows: First measure the sand and ce- ment required for a batch and mix these into mortar as described on page 5. Spread out this mortar in a thin layer and on top of it spread the aggregate, which has been previously measured and well wetted. The mixing is done by turning with shovels three or more times, as HOW TO USE THEM 347 may be found necessary to produce a thoroughly uni- form mixture, water being added if necessary to give the proper consistency. The mixers, two or four in num- ber, according to the size of the batch, face each other and shovel to right and left, forming two piles, after which the material is turned back into a pile at the cen- tre. By giving the shovel a slight twist, the material is scattered in leaving it and the efficiency of the mixing is much increased. Consistency of Cimcrete. — A dry mixture, from which water can be brought to the surface only by vigorous tamping, is probably the strongest, but for the sake of economy, and to insure a dense concrete well filling the moulds a moderately soft mixture is recommended for. ordinary purposes. Where the pieces to be moulded are thin, and where small reinforcing metal rods are placed close together or near the surface, a rather wet mixture may be necessary to insure the moulds being well filled. Use of Quick-Setting Cement. — In the manufacture of such articles as pipe, fence posts, and hollow blocks, a rather large proportion of quick-setting cement is sometimes used, the object being to reduce the weight and consequent freight charges by means of a strong mixture, as well as to make the concrete impervious to water. The use of a quick-setting cement permits the moulds to be removed sooner than would be possible with a slow-setting cement, thus reducing the number of moulds necessary for a given output. Quick-setting ce- ments are not recommended for such purposes, however, as they are usually inferior to those -which set slowly. Coloring Cement Work. — In coloring cement work the best results are obtained by the use of mineral pig- ment. The coloring matter, in proportions depending 348 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES upon the desired shade, should be thoroughly mixed with the dry cement before making the mortar. By prepar- ing small specimens of the mortar and noting the color after drying, the proper proportions may be determined. For gray or black, use lampblack. For yellow or buff, use yellow ochre. For brown, use umber. For red, use Venetian red. For blue, use ultramarine. Depositing Concrete. — Concrete should be deposited in layers of from 4 to 8 inches and thoroughly tamped before it begins to harden. The tamping required will depend upon the consistency of the mixture. If mixed very dry it must be vigorously rammed to produce a dense mass, but as the proportion of water increases less tamping will be found necessary. Concrete should not be dumped in place from a height of more than 4 feet, unless it is again mixed at the bottom. A wooden in- cline may be used for greater heights. Rammers for ordinary concrete work should weigh from 20 to 30 pounds and have a face not exceeding 6 inches square. A smaller face than this is often desirable, but a larger one will be less effective in consolidating the mass. In cramped situations special forms must be employed to suit the particular conditions. When a thickness of more than one layer is required, as in foundation work, two or more layers may be worked at the same time, each layer slightly in advance of the one next above it and all being allowed to set together. At the end of a day there is usually left a layer partially completed which must be finished the next day. This layer .should not be beveled off, but the last batch of concrete should be tamped behind a vertical board forming a step. HOW TO USE THEM 349 To avoid introducing a plane of weakness where fresh concrete is deposited upon that which has already set, certain precautions have to be observed. The surface of the old work should be clean and wet before fresh ma- terial is put on, a thin coat of neat cement grout being sometimes employed to insure a good bond. The sur- face of the concrete to receive an additional layer must not be finished off smoothly, but should offer a rough surface to bond with the next layer. This may be done by roughing the surface while soft with pick and shovel, or the concrete may be so rammed as to present a rough and uneven surface. "Wooden blocks or scantling are sometimes embedded several inches in the work and re- moved before the concrete hardens, thus forming holes or grooves to be filled by the next layer. Retempering. — As stated before, it is important that concrete be tamped in place before it begins to harden, and for this reason it is proper to mix only so much at a time as is required for immediate use. The retempering of concrete which has begun to set is a point over which there is much controversy. From tests made in this laboratory it would appear that such concrete suffers but little loss of strength if thoroughly mixed with sufficient water to restore normal consistence. The time required for concrete to set depends upon the character of the cement, upon the amount and tem- perature of the water used in mixing, and upon the temperature of the air. Concrete mixed dry sets more quickly than if mixed wet, and the time required for setting decreases as the temperature of the water rises. "Warm air also hastens the setting. Cpncrete Exposed to Sea-Water. — Portland cement concrete is well adapted for work exposed to sea-water, 350 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES but when used for this purpose it should be mixed with fresh water. The concrete must be practically imper- vious, at least on the surfaces, and to accomplish this purpose the materials should be carefully proportioned and thoroughly mixed. It is also of great importance that the concrete be well compacted by tamping, par- ticularly on exposed surfaces. Concrete Work in Freezing Weather. — Although it is advisable under ordinary conditions to discontinue ce- ment work in freezing weather, Portland cement may be used without serious difficulty by taking a few simple precautions. As little water as possible should be used in mixing, to hasten the setting of the concrete. To prevent freezing, hot water is frequently used in mixing mortar or concrete, and with the same object in view salt is added in Eimounts depending upon the degree of cold. A common practice is to add 1 pound of salt to 18 gal- lons of water, with the addition of 1 oz. of salt for each degree below 32° F. Either of the above methods will give good results, but it should be remembered that the addition of salt often produces efQorescence. It seems to be a fairly well-established fact that concrete de- posited in freezing weather will ultimately develop full strength, showing no injury due to the low temperature. Rubble Concrete. — In massive concrete work consider- able economy may often be introduced by. the use of large stones in the body of the work, but only in heavy foundations, retaining walls, and similar structures should this form of construction be permitted. In plac- ing these large stones in the work the greatest care must be exercised to insure each being well bedded, and the concrete must be thoroughly tamped around them. Each HOW TO USE THEM 351 stone should be at least 4 inches from its neighbor and an equal distance from the face of the work. To Face Concrete. — A coating of mortar one-half inch in thickness is frequently placed next the form to prevent the stone or gravel from showing and to give a smooth and impervious surface. If in preparing this mortar finely crushed stone is used instead of sand, th*" •fihaet-metal plate used in facing concrete. NO, 6. work will more nearly resemble natural stone. A common method employed in facing concrete is to pro- vide a piece of thin sheet metal of convenient length and about 8 to 10 inches wide. To this pieces of angle iron are riveted, so that when placed next to the mould a narrow space is formed in which the cement mortar is placed after the concrete has been deposited behind it. (No. 6.) The metal plate is then withdrawn and the 352 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES concrete well tamped. The concrete and facing mor- tar must be put in at the same time so that they will set together. If the concrete is fairly rich, a smooth surface can usually be produced without a facing of mortar by working a spade up and down between the concrete and inner face of the mould, thus forcing the larger pieces of the aggregate back from the surface. Wood for Forms. — Lumber used in making forms for concrete should be dressed on one side and both edges. The expansion and distortion of the wood due to the absorption of water from the concrete frequently make it difficult to produce an even surface on the work, and unless the forms are accurately fitted together more or less water will find its way out through the cracks, carrying some of the cement with it. A method some- times adopted to minimize the eifect of expansion is to bevel one edge of each board, allowing this edge to crush against the square edge of the adjacent board when expansion takes place. In the case of a wooden core or inside mold, expansion must always be taken intft consideration, for if neglected it may cause cracks or complete rupture of the concrete. Sharp edges in con- crete are easily chipped and should be avoided by plac- ing triangular strips to the comers of moulds. To pre- vent cement from sticking to the forms they may be given a coating of soft soap or be lined with paper. T'his greatly facilitates their removal and enables them to be used again with but little scraping. A wire brush answers best for cleaning the forms. Concrete Sidewalks. — A useful and comparatively simple application of concrete is in the construction of sidewalks, for which purpose it has been used with marked success for a number of years. HOW TO USE THEM 353 Excavation and Preparation of Subgrade. — The ground is excavated to subgrade and well consolidated by ramming to prepare it for the subfoundation of stone, gravel or cinders. The depth of excavation will depend upon the climate and nature of the ground, being deeper in localities where heavy frosts occur or where the ground is soft than in climates where there are no frosts. In the former case the excavation should be carried to' a depth of 12 inches, whereas in the latter from 4 to 6 inches will be sufficient. No roots of trees should be left above the subgrade. The Subfoundation. — The foundation consists of a layer of loose material, such as broken stone, gravel, or cinders, spread over the subgrade and well tamped to secure a firm base for the main foundation of concrete which is placed on top. It is most important that the subfoundation be well drained to prevent the accumula- tion of water, which, upon freezing, would lift and crack the walk. For this purpose it is well to provide drain tile at suitable points to carry off any water which may collect under the concrete. An average thickness for subfoundation is 4 to 6 inches, althoifgh in warm cli- mates, if the ground is firm and well drained, the sub- foundation may only be 2 to 3 inches thick or omitted altogether. The Foundation. — The foundation consists of a layer of concrete deposited on the subfoundation and carry- ing a surface layer or wearing coat of cement mortar. If the ground is firm and the subfoundation well rammed in place and properly drained, great strength will not be required of the concrete, which may, in such cases, be mixed in about the proportions 1-3-6, and a depth of only 3 to 4 inches will be required. Portland cement should 354 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES be used and stone or gravel under 1 inch in size, the con- crete being mixed of ,medium consistency, so that moisture will show on the surface without excessive tamping. The Top Dressing or Wearing Surface. — To give a neat appearance to the finished walk, a top dressing of cement mortar is spread over the concrete, well worked in, and brought to a perfectly smooth surface with straightedge and float. This mortar should be mixed in the proportion 1 part cement to 2 parts sand, sharp coarse sand or screenings below one-fourth inch of some hard, tough rock being used. The practice of making the concrete of natural cement and the wearing surface of Portland is not to be commended, owing to a tendency for the two to separate. Details of Construction. — A cord stretched between stakes will serve as a guide in excavating, after which the bottom of the trench is well consolidated by ram- ming; any loose, material below subgrade is then. spread over the bottom of the trench to the desired thickness and thoroughly compacted. Next, stakes are driven along the sides of the walk; spaced 4 to 6 feet apart, and their tops made even with the finished surface of the walk, which should have a transverse slope of one-fourth inch to the foot for drainage. Wooden strips at least IV2 inches thick and of a suitable depth are nailed to these stakes to serve as a mould to concrete. By carefully adjusting these strips to the exact height of the stakes they may be used as guides, for the straight- edge in levelling off the concrete and wearing surface. The subfoundation is well sprinkled to receive the con- crete, which is deposited in the usual manner, well tamped behind a board set vertically across the trench, HOW TO USE THEM 355 and levelled off with a straightedge as shown in Fig. 7, leaving one-half to 1 inch for the wearing surface. Three-eighths inch sand joints are provided at intervals of 6 to 8 feet to prevent expansion cracks, or, in case of settlement, to confine the cracks to these joints. This is dene either by depositing the concrete in sections, or by dividing it into such sections with a spade when soft and filling the joints with sand. The location of each joint is marked on a wooden frame for future reference. -dm iDetallB of concrete wBlk^cpnstnictlon.. NO. 7. Care must be exercised to prevent sand or any other material from being dropped on the concrete, and thus preventing a proper union with the wearing surface. No section should be left partially completed to be finished with the next batch or left until the next day. Any con- crete left after the completion of a section should be mixed with the next batch. It is of the utmost importance to follow up closely the concrete work with the top dressing in order that the 356 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES two may set together. This top dressing should be worked well over the concrete with a trowel, and levelled with a straightedge (No. 7) to secure an even surface. Upon the thoroughness of this operation often, depends the success or failure of the walk, since a good bond be- tween the wearing surface and concrete base is absolute- ly essential. The mortar should be mixed rather stiff. As soon as the film of water begins to leave the surface, a wooden float is used, followed up by a plasterer's trowel, the operation being similar to that of plastering a wall. The floating, though necessary to give a smooth surface, will, if continued too long, bring a thin layer of neat cement to the surface and probably cause the walk to crack. Jfflnter used in dividing wait into Eections. NO. 8. The surface is now divided into sections by cutting en- tirely through, exactly over the joints in the concrete. This is done with a trowel guided by a straightedge, after which the edges are rounded off with a special tool called a"'jointer, having a thin shallow tongue (No. 8). These sections may be subdivided in any manner desired for the sake of appearance. A special tool called an edger (No. 9) is run round the outside of the walk next to the mould, giving it a neat rounded edge. A toothed roller (No. 10) having small HOW TO USE THEM 357 projections on its face is frequently used to produce slight indentations on the surface, adding somewhat to Tool used in rounding edges. NO. 9. the appearance of the walk. The completed work must be protected from the sun and kept moist by sprinkling Boiler used In finishing surface NO. 10. for several days. In freezing weather the same precau- tions should be taken as in other classes of concrete work. 358 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES Concrete Basement Floors. — ^Basement floors in dwell- ing houses as a rule require only a moderate degree of strength, although in cases of very wet basements, where water pressure from beneath has to be resisted, greater strength is required than would otherwise be necessary. The subfoundation should be well drained, sometimes re- quiring the use of tile for carrying' off the water. The rules given for constructing concrete sidewalks apply equally well to basement floors. The thickness of the concrete foundation is usually from 3 to 5 inches, ac- cording to the strength desired, and for average work a* 1-3-6 mixture is sufficiently rich. Expansion joints are frequently omitted, since the temperature variation is less than in outside work, but since this omission fre- quently gives rise to unsightly cracks, their use is recom- mended in all cases. It will usually be sufficient to divide a room of moderate size into four equal sections, separated by % inch sand joints. The floor should be given a slight slope toward the center or one corner,' with provision at the lowest point for carrying off any water that may accumulate. Concrete Stable Floors and Driveways. — Concrete stable floors and driveways are constructed in the same general way as basement floors and sidewalks, but with a thicker foundation, on account of the greater strength required. The foundation may well be 6 inches thick, .with a 10 inch wearing surface. An objection often sometimes raised against concrete driveways is that they become slippery when wet; but this fault is in a great measure overcome by dividing the wearing surface into small squares about 4 inches on the side, by means of tri- angular grooves % of an inch deep. This gives a very HOW TO USE THEM 359 neat appearance and furnishes a good foothold for horses. Concrete Steps. — Concrete may be advantageously used in the construction of steps, particularly in damp places, such as areaways and cellars of houses, and in the open, where the ground is terraced, concrete steps and walks can be made exceedingly attractive. Where the ground is firm it may be cut away as nearly as pos- sible in the form of steps, with each step left two or three inches below its finished level. The steps are formed, beginning at the top, by depositing the con- Reinforced concrete steps. NO. 11. Crete behind vertical boards so placed as to give the nec- essary thickness to the risers and projecting high enough to serve as a guide in leveling off the tread. Such steps may be reinforced where greater strength is desired or where there is danger of cracking, due to the settlement of the ground. Where the nature of the ground will not admit of its being cut away in the form of steps, the risers are 360 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES molded between two vertical forms. The front one may- be a smooth board, but the other should be a piece of thin sheet metal, which is more easily removed after the earth has been tamped in behind i-t. A simple method of reinforcing steps is to place a % i^ch steel rod in each comer, and thread these with i/4 inch rods bent to the shape of the steps, as shown in No. 11, the latter being placed about 2 feet apart. For this class of work a rich Portland cement concrete is recommended, with the use of stone or gravel under Yz inch in size. Steps may be given a % iiich wearing surface of cement mortar mixed in the proportion of 1 part cement to 2 parts sand. This system, as well as many others, is well adapted for stair- ways in houses. Reinforced Concrete Fence Posts. — Comparison of dif- ferent Post Materials: There is a constantly increasing demand for some form of 'fence posts which is not sub- ject to decay. The life of wooden posts is very limited, and the scarcity of suitable timber in many localities has made it imperative to find a substitute. A fence post, to prove thoroughly satisfactory, must fulfil three conditions: (1) It must be obtainable cost; (2) it must possess sufficient strength to meet the demands of gen- eral farm use; (3) it must not be subject to decay, and must be able to withstand successfully the effects of water, frost and fire. Although iron posts of various designs are frequently used for ornamental purposes, their adoption for general farm use is prohibited by their excessive cost. Then, too, iron posts exposed to the weather are subject to corrosion, to prevent which neces- sitates repainting from time to time, and this item will entail considerable expense in cases where a large num- ber of posts are to be used. HOW TO USB THEM 361 At the present time the material which seems most nearly to meet these requirements is reinforced con- crete. The idea of constructing fence posts of concrete reinforced with iron or steel is by no means a new one, but, on the contrary, such posts have been experimented with for years, and a great number of patents have been issued covering many of the possible forms of reinforce- ment. It is frequently stated that a reinforced con- crete post can be made and put in the ground for the same price as a wooden post. Of course this will de- pend in any locality upon the relative value of wood and the various materials which go to make up the concrete post, but in the great majority of eases wood will prove the cheaper material in regard ta first cost. On the other hand, a concrete post will last indefinitely, its strength increasing with age, whereas the wooden post must be replaced at short intervals, probably making it more expensive in the long run. In regard to strength, it must be borne in mind that it is not prax3ticable to make concrete fence posts as strong as wooden posts of the same size ; but since wooden posts, as a rule, are many times stronger than is neces- sary, this difference in strength should not condemn the use of reinforced concrete for this purpose. Moreover, strength in many cases is of little importance, the fence being used only as a dividing line, and in such cases small concrete posts provide ample strength and present a very uniform and neat appearance. In any case, to enable concrete posts to withstand the loads they are called upon to carry, sufiicient strength may be secured by means of reinforcement, and where great strength is required this may be obtained by using a larger post with a greater proportion of metal and well braced, as 362 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES is usual in such cases. In point of durability, concrete is unsurpassed by any material of construction. It offers a perfect protection to the metal reinforcement and is not itself affected by exposure, so that a post constructed of concrete reinforced with steel will last indefinitely and require no attention in the way of repairs. . .,, Reinforcement. — No form of wooden reinforcement, either on the surface or within the post, can be recom- mended. If on the surface, the wood will soon decay, and if a wooden core is used it will, in all probability, swell by the absorption of moisture and crack the post. The use of galvanized wire is sometimes advocated, but if the post is properly constructed and a good concrete used, this precaution against rust will be unnecessary^ since it has been fully demonstrated by repeated tests that concrete protects steel perfectly from rust. If plain, smooth wire or rods are used for reinforcement they should be bent over at the ends or looped to pre- vent slipping in the concrete. Twisted fence wire may usually be obtained at a reasonable cost and is very well suited for this purpose. Barbed wire has been proposed and is sometimes used, although the barbs make it ex- tremely difficult to handle. For the sake of economy the smallest amount of metal consistent with the desired strength miost be used, and this requirement makes it necessary to place the reinforcement near the surface, where its strength is utilized to greatest advantage, with only enough concrete on the outside to form a protective e(3vering. A reinforcing member in each corner of the post is probably the most efficient arrangement. Concrete for Fence Posts. — The concrete should be mixed with Portland cement in about the proportions 1-214-5, broken stone or gravel under i^ inch being used. HOW TO USE THEM 363 In cases where the aggregate contains pieces smaller than 14 inch, less sand may be used, and in some cases it may be omitted altogether. A mixture of medium con- sistency is recommended on the ground that it fills the molds better and with less tamping than if mixed quite dry. Molds for Fence Posts. — Economy points to the use of a tapering post, which, fortunately, offers no diffi- culties in the way of molding. All things considered, "Wooden jnold^for maklne fence nosts wltb four tapering sidee. NO. 12. TTtf i 1 4' Ik. g IF 1 ;■;■. F 1 if;. ^•M ^■m ■■i::'M v. ^'i %1 ^H tf !■!' ^ i p-- ?%l '^ m m i wooden molds will be found most suitable. They can easily and quickly be made in any desired form and size. Posts may be molded either in a vertical or horizontal position, the latter being the simpler and better method. If molded vertically a wet mixture is necessary, requir- ing a longer time to set, with the consequent delay in removing the molds. No. 12 shows a simple mold, which has been used with satisfactory results in this laboratory. 364 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES This mold has a capacity of four posts, but larger molds could easily be made on the same principle. It consists of two end pieces, (a) carrying lugs, (b) between which are inserted strips (c). The several parts are held to- gether with hooks and eyes, as shown in No. 12. To pre- vent any bulging of the side strips they are braced, as illustrated. Dressed lumber at least 1 inch thick, and preferably 1% inches, should be used. In No. 12 the -WoodeD mold for making fence Dosts with two tapering aides. NO. 13. post measures 6 by 6 inches at the bottom, 6 by 3 at the top, and 7 feet in length, having two parallel sides. If it is desired to have the posts square at both ends the mold must be arranged as in No. 13. This latter form of post is not as strong as the former, but requires less concrete in its construction. Great care in tamping is necessary to insure the corners of the mold being well HOW TO USE THEM 365 filled, and if this detail is not carefully watched, the metal, being exposed in places, will be subject to rust. Attaching Fence Wires to Posts. — Various devices have been suggested for attaching fence, wires to the posts, the object of each being to secure a simple and permanent fastener or one admitting of easy renewal at any time. Probably nothing will answer the purpose better than a long staple or bent wire well embedded in the concrete, being twisted or bent at the end to prevent extraction. Galvanized metal must be used for fasteners, since they Detail sbowing method of at' tachlng wire to post. NO. 14. are not protected by the concrete. A piece of small flex- ible wire, about two inches in length, threading the staplf and twisted several times with a pair of pliers, holds the line wire in position. (No. 14.) Molding and Curing Posts. — For the proper method of mixing concrete see previous pages. It is recommended that only so much concrete be mixed at one time as can be used before it begins to harden ; but if an unavoidable delay prevents the posts being molded until after the ^66 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES concrete has begun to set, it is thought that a thorough, regauging with sufficient water to restore normal con- sistency will prevent any appreciable loss of strength, though the concrete may have been standing one or two hours. In using a mold similar to those illustrated in Nos. 12 and 13 it is necessary to provide a perfectly smooth and even platform of a size depending upon the number of posts to be molded. A cement floor if accessi- ble may be used to advantage. The molds when in place are given a thin coating of soft soap, the platform or cement floor, serving as bottom of mold, being treated in the same way. About 1% inches is spread evenly over the bottom and carefully tamped, so as to reduce it to a thickness of about 1 inch. A piece of board cut as in No. 12 will be found useful in leveling off the concrete to the desired thickness before tamping. On top of this layer two reinforcing members are placed about 1 inch from the sides of the mold. The molds are then filled and tamped in thin layers to the level of the other two reinforcing members, the fasteners for fence wires being inserted during the operation. These reinforcing mem- bers are adjusted as were the first two, and the remain- ing 1 inch of concrete tamped and leveled off, thus com- pleting the post so far as molding is concerned. To avoid sharp edges, which are easily chipped, triangular strips may be placed in the bottom of mold along the sides, and when the molds have been filled and tamped, similar strips may be inserted on top. The top edges may be beveled with a trowel or by running an edging tool hav- ing a triangular projection on its bottom along the edges. Such a tool is shown in No. 15, and can easily be made of wood or metal. It is not necessary to carry the bevel below the ground line. HOW TO USE THEM 367 The ends and sides of the mold may be removed after twenty-four hours, but the posts shpuld not be handled for at least one week, during which time they must be well sprinkled several times daily and protected from sun and wind. The intermediate strips may be carefully withdrawn at the end of two or three days, but it is bet- ter to leave them in place until the posts are removed. Although a post may be hard and apparently strong when one week old^ it will not attain its full strength in that length of time, and must be handled with the utmost care to prevent injury. Carelessness in handling green posts frequently results in the formation of fine cracks, which though unnoticed at the time, give evidence of their presence later in the failure of the posts. Tool used tor beveling edges of posts. NO. 15. Posts should be allowed to cure for at least sixty days before being placed in the ground, and for this purpose it is recommended that when moved from the molding platform they be placed upon a smooth bed of moist sand and protected from the sun until thoroughly cured. Dur- ing this period they should receive a thorough drench- ing at least once a day. 368 CEMENTS AND CONCEETES The life oi' the molds will depend upon the care with which they are handled. A coating of mineral oil or shellac may be used instead of soap to prevent the cement from sticking to the forms. As soon as the molds are \removed they should be cleaned with a wire brush before (being used again. The cost of reinforced concrete fence posts depends in each case upon the cost of labor and materials, and must necessarily vary in different localities. An esti- mate in any particular case can be made as follows : One cubic yard of concrete will make twenty posts measuring 6 inches by 6 inches at the bottom, 6 inches by 3 inches at the top, and 7 feet long, and if mixed in the propor- tions 1-21/^-5, requires approximately : 1.16 barrels of cement, at $2 $2.32 0.44 cubic yard of sand, at 75 cts 33 0.88 cubic yard of gravel, at 75 cts 66 Materials for 1 cubic yard cement $3.21 Concrete for one post 17 28 feet of 0.16 inch steel wire, at 3 cts a pound 06 Total cost of concrete and metal for 1 post 23 To this must be added the cost of mixing concrete, molding and handling posts, and the costs of molds, an addition which should not in any case exceed 7 cents, making a total of 30 cents per post. Concrete Building Blocks.- — Concrete building blacks, or cement blocks, as they are frequently called, are more extensively used now than ever before. These blocks are molded hollow primarily to reduce their cost, but ihis hollow construction serves other useful purposes at the saw? tim?, Th§ fijri^amwtal principles go vera ing HOW TO USE THEM • 369 ordinary concrete work, so far as proportioning and mixing materials is concerned, apply equally well to the manufacture of building blocks, and it should be borne in mind that strength and durability can not be obtained by the use of any machine unless the cement, sand, and aggregate are of good quality, properly proportioned and well mixed. The aggregate for blocks of ordinary size should be crushed stone or gravel not larger than % inch. One of the chief causes of complaint against the concrete building block is its porosity, but this defect is in a great measure due to the fact that in an endeavor to economize too little cement is frequently used. It is not unusual to give the blocks a facing of cement mor- tar consisting of about 2 parts sand to 1 of cement, while the body of the block is composed of a concrete of suffi- cient strength, though not impervious. This outside layer of mortar adds practically nothing to the strength of the block, and is used simply to give a uniform sur- face and to render the face of the wall more clearly im- pervious to water. It would not be practicable as a rule to attempt the manufacture of concrete blocks without one of the many forms of molding machines designed for the purpose, noi would it be economical to purchase such a machine un- less a sufficient number of blocks were required to justify such an outlay. Blocks in almost any desired shape and size, with either plain or ornamental faces, may be ob- tained on the market, and in the great majority of cases it is best to buy them from some reliable firm. Among the advantages claimed for hollow concrete block con- struction may be mentioned the following : (1) Hollow block construction introduces a saving of jna,t?rial oyer brick or sto»e masonry. 370 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES (2) The cost of laying concrete blocks is less than for brick work. This is due to the fact that the blocks, being larger, require a much smaller number of joints and less mortar, and, being hollow, are of less weight than solid brick work. (3) A wall constructed of good concrete blocks is as strong or stronger than a brick wall of equal thickness. (4) Concrete blocks, being easily molded to any de- sired form, will prove to be a far more economical build- ing material than stone, which has to be dressed to shape. (5) Experience has proved concrete to be a most ex- cellent fire resisting material. (6) Concrete blocks, being hollow, tend to prevent sudden changes of temperature within a house, making it cool in summer and easily heated in winter. (7) ■ The hollow spaces provide an easy means for running pipes and electric wires. These spaces may also be used wholly or in part for heating and ventilating flues. Tests of Concrete Fence Posts. — In the summer of 1904 a number of reinforced concrete fence posts were made for experimental purposes, with a view to deter- mining their adaptability for general use. These posts were made both with and without reinforcement, and tested at the age of 90 days. The reinforcement, rang- ing from 0.27 per cent, to 1.13 per cent., consisted of four round steel rods, one in each corner of post about 1 inch from surface, the posts having a uniform cross- section of 6 by 6 inches. The posts were molded in a horizontal position, as this was found by trial to be more satisfactory than molding them vertically. HOW TO USB THEM 371 The concrete was mixed moderately soft, crushed stone between 1 inch and % inch and gravel under % inch being used as aggregate. River sand, fairly clean and sharp, was employed with Portland cement. The posts were tested as beams, supported at both ends and loaded at the centre, with spans varying from 4 feet to 5 feet 6 inches. An attempt was made to prevent slipping by providing the reinforcing rods with collars and set screws at the ends, but in every case, with but two ex- ceptions, the rods slipped under a comparatively light load, thus showing the necessity for some form of me- chanical bond. As would be expected, those posts which were not reinforced possessed very little strength. ■ V \— /g*^ I 4*0*- 3 Method of testing posts udder static loads. A series of tests was made with sheet-iron reinforce- ment, in the form of round and square pipes, embedded in the posts, but these posts, though developing consid- erable strength, proved less economical than those rein- forced with plain rods, and at the same time were less simple in construction. The results of these tests, as re- corded in Table I., do not properly represent the strength of similar posts in which some form of mechanical bond is provided to develop the full strength of the reinforce- ment. 372 CEMENTS AND CONCEETES S^- I O rM CO IS to CO ~ I "tl* ■* CO CO CO to COlOOmOllQeDfHQlfiMSOOCJOO O?5oiO»-(00C000SNT»<0saMOiHOO00f-l OJ B 03 0] , 3 o 2 £ M 2 oiooeooicc 1 10 Tj< 00 CO ■* 10 d IC 00 00 •OOOOOOCOiOQQQOiH'^ttQCfl Q i05ogiS«5C-lt-»CCOlQO ■ir3-*r-IOJ01rHW»0®l-».(NQliScOm ;COcSc^^(N N (NCOCN CC ■ Th ■!»"#■*"* CO DJ N CO wc,m«C"q|Mm«)comoooiO"<*'ioc5QOOT- g',j(eDI>C0iHO00CfceDiOl>iraTfl«3rH0JO»OTHlCTtlC-]00L---^H00rHiHC HrHiHTHiH.HiHrHiHiHrHINNC^MCNiHC^NCO'^Tjt'^CO'tfW'^ lOOOOOOOOQ 'OQOOOOOOOOOOOOOO cooigH ooo-qieoo •OO'^ (oco(NS50'Wtoo«oS5i5 T-i OS 01 00 r-( 01 CO 1> tH •COQOSDOieOOimOC^ y3^00Q5ooa>l> j^OO«OtOOOOO(fl(D5DOiCOeDtDtOOCOOOOeDOCOOOO(OtOO«DtO ajoyoooa)OOoo^oooooooo 0 15 a f^ pq 1 Drawn Bteelrod.s 0.08 800 1120 218 306 '/. ao .08 .08 820 640 1145 1080 224 175 313 295 _ 3 do 4 do . .. 08 ' 795 1040 217 284 37 do .08 .08 940 740 1170 1075 257 202 319 293 3S do ;r 9 do .19 1140 1280 311 349 ^■= 1 10 do .19 1170 1885 319 515 11 do .19 1020 1950 278 532 .S» do .19 .19 .06 06 760 820 825 755 1945 1925 935 905 207 224 225 206 531 526 255 247 40 do 13 15 Twisted fence wire do 16 do .06 800 940 218 257 17 do .06 815 935 222 255 18 do .06 .06 .13 .13 .13 .13 .06 770 780 1560 1275 1200 1500 980 980 975 1920 1670 1830 1955 980 210 213 423 348 328 410 268 268 266 524 456 500 634 268 19 do ?1 do 97, do 23 do ?4 do 25 Barbed wire W do .06 .06 .06 .06 .06 .06 .06 .13 .18 .13 .13 .08 820 590 745 590 550 560 480 680 840 1280 800 Teste 820 740 745 590 640 635 530 1040 1010 1515 1375 dbv 224 161 203 161 150 153 131 186 229 349 218 mpaci 224 202 203 161 175 173 145 284 276 414 375 OT do ?« do 9,9 do 30 do 31 3? do do »i ... .do 34 do 3.5 .do .Sfi do 6 Drawn steel rods 7 do .19 .19 .06 .06 do... do... do... do -- 8 14 do Twisted fence wire do 20 \ ' — ' 376 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES advantage over the barbed wire as a reinforcing material, particularly when two wires are used in each corner of the post. As stated before, it is impracticable to make a rein- forced concrete fence post as strong as a wooden post of the same size, and this is more especially true if the post 'First method of testing postK ty impact. NO. 17. has to withstand the force of a sudden blow or impact. In order to study the behavior of these posts under im- pact, a number of them were braced, as illustrated in No. 17, and subjected to the blow of a 50-pound bag of gravel, suspended from above by a 9-foot rope. The first blow was delivered by deflecting the bag so as to give it a vertical drop of 1 foot, and for each successive HOW TO USE THEM 377 blow the drop was increased 1 foot. None of the posts showed any signs of failure under the first blow. Posts Nos. 14 and 20 cracked under the second blow, and failed under the third. Post No. 6 cracked under the second blow, which cracked open under the third blow, causing a momentary deflection of 5 inches. Posts Nos. 7 and 8 each developed a crack under the second blow, but showed no further signs T)f weakness after the fifth blow. c- mm- 1 Second method of testing posts by impact. NO. 18. other than a slight opening of the initial crack. In each case the only crack developed was at point A. Posts 6; 7, and 8, which cracked but did not fail under the im- pact test, were further tested, as indicated in No. 18, by raising the small end and allowing them to drop from successive heights at 1, 2, 3 and 4 feet. Under this test a number of cracks developed, but in no case did the re- inforcement fail. Although it might appear from these results that posts as here described have hardly enough strength to recom- mend them for general use, it should be remembered that in many cases fence posts are not subjected to impact,. 378 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES and it may prove more economical to replace from time to time those which fail in this way than to use wooden posts, which, being subject to decay, must all be replaced sooner or latet". P£ff C£f^7- Of=- C/L^'y //V yS>1/VO OS /o /s so ss ■so 05 -^o -^s so Diagram showing the effect of clay on cement moitais. NO. 19. Betempering. — Table III. illustrates the effect of re- tempering Portland cement mortar. The mortars used consisted of Portland cement and crushed quartzite be- tween 1 and 2 millimeters in size, mixed in different pro- HOW TO USE THEM 379 portions. In each case, after the initial or final set had taken place, sufficient water was added in retempering to TABLE III. — Effect of Eetempeeing on Cement Mortars. Tensile Strength, in Pounds Per Square Inch. Treatment of Mortar. Neat Cement. a IPart Cement, •1 Part Sand.fi IPart Cement, 2 Parts Sand, c IPart Cement, 3 Parts Sand, d Mortar made up into briquettes . immediately after mixing 651 650 673 634 679 624 701 624 581 610 527 493 529 480 492 417 385 421 403' 409 Average 657 628 504 407 Mortar allowed to take initial set, then broken up and made into briquettes 671 593 644 633 724 692 670 654 676 700 589 554 559 534 532 326 349 330 358 267 Average „ 653 678 554 326 ■ Mortar allowed to take final set, then broken up and made into briquettes r^. 455 522 525 558 642 527 569 587 666 568 492 491 497 486 531 364 380 361 315 345 Average 540 563 499 353 a Initial set, 1 hour 42 minutes: final set, 7 hours 15 minutes. 6 Initial set, 1 hour 30 minutes- final set, 7 hours 15 minutes, c Initial set, 2 hours; final set, 7 hours, d Initial set, 2 hours 20 minutes; final set, 7 hours. restore normal consistency, at the age of four months. The briquettes were tested 380 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES Some Practical Notes. — Spencer B. Newbury, who is an authority on the subject, says "that the making of good cement concrete is a comparatively simple matter, and yet, like most simple operations in engineering, there is a right way and a wrong way of doing it. Probably nine-tenths of the concrete work done falls far short of the strength it might develop, owing to the incorrect pro- portions, use of too much water, and imperfect mixing. All authorities are agreed upon the importance of thor- ough mixing and the use of the minimum quantity of water in all classes of concrete work. The matter of cor- rect proportions of cement, sand, broken stones, etc., is one which requires some thought and calculation, and by proportioning these ingredients correctly an immense saving in cost and increase in strength can easily be se- cured. The chief object in compounding concrete is to pro- duce a compact mass, as free as possible from pores or open spaces ; in short, to imitate solid rock as closely as possible. Cement is the "essence of rock" in portable form, and by its judicious use granular or fragmentary materials may be bound togetjier into solid blocks of any desired size and shape, which in strength and wearing qualities are at least equal to the best stone that comes from the quarries. Cement is, however, very costly in comparison with the other ingredients of concrete, and must not be used wastefully. A little cement, judi- ciously used, is better than a large quantity thrown in recklessly, as a little study of the principles involved will plainly show. To produce a compact mass from fragmentary ma- terials, the voids must be filled. Imagine a box holding 1 cubic foot. If this were filled with spheres of uniform HOW TO USE TH^ 381 size, the voids or open spaces would be one-third the total volume, or 33 1-3 per cent., with spheres of various sizes, as, for example, from large marble down to fine shot, the voids would be much less, and it wOuld theoretically be possible, by the use of spheres of graded sizes, from the largest down to dust of infinite fineness, to fill the box completely, so that there would be no voids whatever. In practice it is well known that the use of materials of varying fineness gives the best concrete, since the voids are much less than in materials composed of pieCea of uniform size. Hence the common practice of making concrete with cement, sand and broken stone, instead of with cement and sand, or cement and stone only. The sand fills the voids, and if the proportions are correct, a practically solid mass results. As an example of this, the writer found the briquettes of cement with three parts of sand and four parts gravel showed higher ten- sile strength at 28 days than those made with three parts sand only. The following table gives the relative weights of a given volume of different materials, and also the per- centage of voids, as determined by the writer. The ma- terials were shaken down in a liter measure by giving one hundred taps on the table, and weighed. In the case of the broken stone a larger measure was used. The voids were calculated from the specific gravity. Comparison of the three different grades of Sandusky Bay sand shows how greatly the percentage of voids varies with the proportion of fine and coarse grains pres- ent. The firat is the natural sand, not screened, as pumped up by the sand sucker from the bottom of the bay, and contains a large amount of fine gravel. The second is the same, passed through a 20-mesh screen to 382 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES remove the coarse particles. It will be seen that this operation increases the proportion of voids from- 32 to 38 per cent. The third is the same sand passing a 20- mesh and retained on a 30-mesh screen, thus brought to the fineness of the "standard sand" used in cement test- ing. This shows 40.7 per cent, of voids, owing to the uni- form size of the grains. The same relation is seen in the WEIGHT OF UNIT MEASUBE AND PEECENTAGE OF VOIDS IN VARIOUS MATERIALS. Portland cement Louisville cement , Sandusky Bay sand, not screened Sandusky Bay sand, through 20-mesh screen Sandusky Bay sand, 20-30 mesh (standard sand) Gravel, % to % inch Gravel, /i to -^v inch Marblehead broken stone (chiefly about egg size) Per Cent of Voids. 32.3 38.5 40.7 42.4 35.9 47.0 two grades of gravel given in the table, that containing finer grains showing much the lower percentage of voids. These figures illustrate the imprudence of screening any of the materials used in making concrete. The pres- ence of clay in sand is, however, objectionable, not be- cause of its fine state of subdivision, but because the clay coats the sand particles and prevents the adhesion of the cement. Such sand might be improved by wash- ing, but probably not by screening. It has been found HOW TO USE THEM 383 that cement which has been ground to dust with an equal amount of sand goes much further when used for con- crete than the same quantity of cement when used in the ordinary way. This is doubtless owing to the fact that the sand dust aids in filling the voids. It is also well known that slaked lime, when added to cement mor- tar, greatly increases the strength of mixtures poor in cement. From the figures given in the above table the compo- sition of a theoretically perfect concrete may readily be calculated. The existence of voids in the cement may be disregarded, since in the process of hardenmg the cement sends out crystals in all directions, completely encrusting the sand particles and practically filling all the voids which the cement itself contains. Examination of a well-hardened briquette of cement with 3 parts sand, after breaking, with the aid of a lens, will show this clearly Suppose, for example, we wish to make the best pos- sible concrete from Portland cement with the sand and gravel given in the above table. We should, of course, choose the unscreened sand and gravel as containing the least proportion of voids. One hundred measures of gravel would require 35.9 measures of sand. As the sand contains 32.3 per cent, of voids, we require 32.3 per cent, of 35.9, or 11.6 measures of cement. The pro- portions would, therefore, be : Cement, 11 ; sand, 3, and gravel, 9. It is customary, however, to increase the pro- portion of mortar (cement and sand) by about 15 or 20 per cent., in order that the coarser materials may be completely coated with the finer mixture. Making this addition, we find the concrete proportions to be : Cement, 1; sand, 2.8'; gravel, 7. Allowance must also be made in 384 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES practice for imperfect mixing, since the materials can never be distributed in a perfectly uniform manner. Practically, with these materials, a concrete of cement 1, sand 2%, and gravel 6, virould probably give the best result, and little or no improvement would result from increasing the proportion of cement. A similar calculation shows that the correct propor- tions for a concrete made of the sand and broken stone given in the table would be 1 to 3 to 6%. Increasing the amount of cement and sand by 20 per cent., we have 1 to 3 to 5I/2. Probably 1 to 2l^ to 5 would be found to give the best results in practice. The determination of the voids in the sand, gravel and broken stone used is of the greatest value in adjusting the proportions of concrete. The simplest method of determining this in the case of gravel and broken stone is to Have a metal box made of 1 cubic foot capacity ; this is filled with the material to be tested, well shaken down a,nd struck off level. The box and contents are then weighed. Water is now pftured in until it rises even with the surface, and the total weight again taken. The difference in the weights is the weight of the water filling the voids of the ma- terial. Now 1 cubic foot of water weighs 64 4-10 lbs., and from the weight of the water found the percentage of voids can be simply calculated. For example, in one experiment the box and broken stone weighed 88 lbs. After filling the spaces in the stone with water the weight -was ,iny2 lbs., a difference of 29% lbs. The percentage of voids is, therefore, 291/2x100 divided by 62.4 equals 47 per cent. In the case of sand this method will not answer, as it IB difficult to completely fill the voids of the sand by HOW TO USE THEM 385 adding the water. The voids can, however, be readily calculated from the weight of a cubic foot and the spe- cific gravity. The specific gravity of quartz sand is about 2.65. A cubic foot of sand, free from voids, would therefore weigh 2.65x62.4 equaling 165.4 lbs. The weight of a cubic foot of sand, well shaken down, was, however, found to be only 112 lbs., a difference of 53.4 lbs. The proportion of voids was, therefore, 53.4x100 divided by 165.4 equals 32.3 per cent. The percentage in voids in clean natural sand does not vary greatly, and may be taken as 33 to 35 per cent, for coarse and 35 to 38 per cent, for fine sand. We have already seen that with the materials above described, concrete composed of . Cement 1, sand 2^^, gravel 6, or Cement 1, saild 2^^, broken stone 5 by measure, will be practically compact and non-porous, and that there is no object in increasing the proportion of cement*. Such concrete, if made from Portland cement, will, however, be rather expensive, requiring about one barrel of cement (equals 3% cubic feet) for every cubic yard. This is unnecessarily good for ordinary work, and will only be required for foundations of engines and other heavy machinery, in which the best possible result must be secured regardless of cost. In cheaper concretes the relative proportions of sand and broken stone should be the same, as determined by the voids in the coarser materials, while the proportion of cement may be varied according to the required conditions of quality and cost. Most excellent concrete may be made by using : Portland cement 1, sand 7, stone or gravel 14. Here are specimens of these two concretes, taken from trial blocks laid Oct. 1, 1894, to determine the best pro- 386 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES portion for the foundation of brick pavement. The richer of the two, 1-5-10, is certainly good enough for any purpose, even for engine foundations. A cubic yard of such concrete requires about % barrel of cement ; the total cost of the cement^ sand and stone is about two dollars per cubic yard. This is no more expensive than concrete made from Louisville cement with 2 of sand and 4 of broken stone, and is immensely superior to the latter in strength. The following table shows the results obtained in Germany by R. DykerhofE in determining the crushing strength of various' concretes. The blocks used were 2^4 inches square, and were tested after one day in air and 27 days in water. Proportions by Measure. strength under Compression. Portland Cement. Sand. Gravel. Pounds per Square Inch. 2 2 2 3 3 3 4 4 4 3 5 5 5 . 6X 5 8X 2125 2747 , , 2387 978 1383 1632 1515 1053 1273 1204 These figures prove the statement already made, that mixtures of cement and sand are strengthened, rather than weakened, by the addition of a suitable quantity of gravel. It will be noticed that the mixture — cement 1, HOW TO USE TME]\[ 387 sand 2, gravel 5 — is actually stronger than cement 1, sand 2, without gravel. The same is shown in the mix- tures 1 to 3 and l,to 4. In estimating the amount of material required to pro- duce a given volume of concrete, it may be stated that when very strongly rammed into place the volume of concrete obtained frcm correct proportions of the ma- terials will be about 10 per cent, more the volume 1 cubic foot cement, 2i/2 cubic feet sand, and 5 cubic feet stone, and will therefore yield about 5i/2 cubic feet concrete. Another Concrete Stairway and Steps. — A good stair- case is one of the essential features in a building. The safety and convenience of persons using a staircase are not only affected by the due proportions and arrange- ments of the steps, but by the strength and fire-resisting proparties of the materials employed, and the manner of construction. The wells are in many cases too small, out of proportion to the structure, which necessitates dangerous winders, tiring high risers, narrow treads, or insufficient headway. Some architects when designing a staircase pay little attention to the practicability of con- struction. What may seem easy in theory or on paper is often found impracticable or unnecessarily difficult when reduced to actual practice. The errors of omission and commission are left for the workmen to contend with and overcome as best they may at the employer's expense. Happily such cases are few, the majority of architects supplying figured drawings, which are not only a help and guide to the workmen, but also ensure a practical staircase in due proportion and without un- necessary expense. Staircases should be spacious, light, and easy of ascent. It is generally admitted that a 12 inch tread and a- 6 inch rise is the most convenient, and 388 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES that no tread should be less than 8 inches or more than 16 inches, and no rise less than 4^2 inches and more than 7 inches. According to Blondel, the rise should be re- duced % inch for every inch added to the tread, or the tread reduced by 1 inch to every ^2 i^ch added to the riser, taking a 12 inch tread and a 6 inch rise as the standard. Treads may be increased by means of a nos- ing, which usually projects from 1 inch to 1% inches. Nosing not only gives more available space for the tread, but also affords some advantage to persons going down stairs, as the heel cannot strike against the rising. In setting out a flight of stairs, the tread of the steps are measured from riser to riser. "Where practicable, the number of steps from landing to landing should be odd, because when a person begins to ascend with the right foot first (as most people do) he should end with the same foot. Rectangular steps are called fliers. Wind- ers, being narrowed at one end, are always more in- convenient and dangerous than .straight steps, and should not be used for public buildings or other places where there is a crowded traffic. Winders are also more expensive to construct. They are, however, un- avoidable in circular staircases, also in some instances in angles, where a quarter or half space landing would not give the desired rise. Winders should be so made that the tread 6 inches from the end of the narrow point should be wide enough to step upon without dan- ger of slipping. No stairs should be less than three feet from the wall to the hand-rail. A width of 3 feet 6 inches will allow two persons to walk arm in arm up or down stairs. A width of 4 feet 6 inches is generally used ; this gives plenty of space for two persons to pass each other. No hard and fast rules can be laid down for the HOW TO USE THEM 389 size of treads and risers, as they are regulated more or less by the size of the well and the height from floor to floor. Too few steps in a flight are as bad as too many. There should not be less than three. Long straight flights of steps are tiring and dangerous. The straight line of length should be broken by landings, so that there may not be more than eleven continuous steps. Landings give ease in ascending and safety when descending. No landing should be less in length than the width of the staircase. The staircases in the pre-Elizabethan style were usually plain, dark and in long narrow flights; but with the Elizabethan archi- tecture came in a more commodious, light and decora- tive style. Wood stairs are often enriched with plaster work, the soffits being panelled with plaster, and the strings adorned with composition or plaster enrich- ments. Stone stairs are also frequently enriched with plaster mouldings in the angles of the soffits and walls. External steps andj^andings are usually made with a fall of ^,4 inch to the foot to allow rain to fall off. Cast Concrete Stairs. — Concrete is now fast super- seding stone, wood and iron for staircase construction, where strength, durability and economy and fire-resist- ing properties are required. Cast concrete stairs were first introduced nearly sixty years ago. The stairs Avere east in single steps, or in treads or risers, and fixed in the same way as natural stone. Square and spandrel steps, risers and treads are cast in wood moulds; circular steps and curtails in plaster moulds. Spandrel steps should have the wall or "tail" end formed square, and- about 4i/^ inches deep, to give a better bed and bond in the wall. A good mixture is 3 parts of granite or slag chippings and .1 of Portland 390 CEMENTS AND CONCEETES cement, gauged stiff, and well rammed into the moulds. When set they are removed from the moulds, air dried, and placed in water or a silicate bath, and treaded in a similar way to that described for slabs. For long steps pieces of T iron, or iron pipes, a:re sometimes in- serted in the centre "of the concrete while being cast. The iron is not actually required to strengthen con- crete properly made; but is used to give a temporary strength to the east while it is green, so as to allow more freedom and security in handling the east when it is being taken from the mould and moved about till permanently fixed. Landings are east in a similar way, but unless very small, they are best done in situ. I have made landings up to 40 feet superficial, but owing to the cost of transit, hoisting and fixing they were not profitable. Tests of Steps. — The following examples show the strength of concrete steps: In Germany, when con- structing a concrete stair, with square steps 3 feet 4 inches long, and 6-ineh tread, and 6i/2-iiich rise, and one end set 8 inches into the walls, four steps were sub- mitted for trial, and 5,940 lbs. weight of iron were gradually piled on them. The steps showed no signs of fracture, but no more weight could be put on be- caTise the masonry began to yield. The load was left on three days, and the steps remained unaffected. Al- though numerous tests have been made of concrete floors and blocks, few have been made for concrete steps. The following may be given as a reliable one: The steps were about 6 feet long, 11-inch tread and 6-inch rise. Every step was tested in the presence of the foreman concreter and author. The steps were supported at both ends, and weighed with a, distribu- HOW TO USE THEM 391 tive load. The majority, which were matured by age, passed the specification standard. Concrete Stairs Formed "in Situ." — Concrete stairs are an outcome of stairs built with cast concrete steps. Stairs formed in situ were introduced in 1867. The idea was suggested by the use of reverse moulds for fibrous plaster work, and in the formation of concrete dormer windows made in situ on some mansions. The step landings and the wall bond, being a monolith structure, were to a certain degree self-supporting. They tend to strengthen instead of to weaken the walls. Architects generally supply drawings of the intended staircase, but as there is often a differ- ence in the size of the details of the actual work and the drawings, it is necessary that the workman should have a practical knowledge of setting out the "height" and " go " for the pitch board, to suit the landings and the well of the staircase, and ensure the necessary head- room. Setting Out Stairs. — A correct method of setting out the framing for concrete stairs is of primary import- ance. The height of a stair is the length of a per- pendicular line drawn from the upper of a floor to that of the one immediately above it. The "go" is the length of a horizontal line drawn along the centre line of the flight of steps or stair space. The exact height and widths should be taken on a rod, which should afterwards be used for setting out the work. Never work without this rod, as it is quicker and more accurate than measuring with a 2-foot rule. There are various ways of getting the dimensions of treads and rises. The following is a simple one and answers for most purposes. The height and go are taken and suitably 392 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES divided. For example, if the height from floor line to floor line is 9 feet 3 inches, and it is proposed to make each rise 6 inches high, reduce the weight to inches, which would be 111; divide by the proposed height of each step — 6 inches — the quotient will be 18, giving the same quotient 6 and 3-18. If there are intermediate landings, or half spaces, their dimensions must be allowed for. The size of the tread is obtained by dividing the "go" by the number of steps. The quotient will be the width of the tread. Great care should be taken in setting out the rods and pitch boards. It is better to measure thrice than to cut twice. "When the string line is marked on the wall, a chase about ^Yo inches deep is cut into the wall. It is not, necessary to cut the chase straight at the soffit line, as it is apt to cut into a half, or rather a whole brick, and leave the ends loose. The irregular line of chase below the soffit line can be made solid during the pro- cess of filling in the steps. The chase should, be cut as the work proceeds. Not more than one flight at a time should be eu.t, to avoid weakening the wall. In some instances a brick course in sand is left by the bricklayers. The bricks are then taken out as the work proceeds. Nosings and Risers. — ^Nosing mouldings should be strong and bold. A simple but well-defined moulding not only gives greater strength, but is more in keep- ing with its purpose than one with numerous or small members. Nosing and riser moulds are best formed in two parts, the nosing moulds being one part and the riser board the other. To cut them out of the solid would not only be expensive, but also cumbrous to fix. They can be run at most saw and moulding mills. HOW TO USE THEM 393 They should be run in lengths and then cut and mitred on the job. Illustration No. 20 shows various forms of nosing. Fig. 1 is a simple nosing for common work. Fig. 2 may be used for school stairs, etc. Figs. 3 and 4 are well adapted for a good class of work. It will be seen that th£ lower edges of the riser boards are splayed. This is to admit the shoe of the running mould; also a trowel to work close up to face of the Fig. 1. Fig. i Fig. 3. Fig. 4' I Sections op Nosing TilQULUS WITH Riser' Boards. NO. 20. concrete riser when running and trowelling off the treads. The dotted lines indicate the line of tread. Nosing moulds are cut in the centre of the section, and afterwards the two parts are held in position with screws while the steps are being filled in. This allows the upper part to be unscrewed and taken off when the stuff is nearly set, thus allowing more freedom to trowel the surface of the tread; also to make a better joint while the stuff is green, and at the part that is cast and the part to be trowelled. The joint in the nosing mould leaves a thin seam which is easily cleaned off, whereas the joint of the tread and nosing is not only seen more, but is also more difficult to make good. 394 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES Illustration No. 21 shows the mould and joint and screws for fixing same. Framing Staircases. — The wood framing for con- crete stairs differs from and is partly the reverse to that used for wood stairs. The nosings are formed the reverse of the moulding, and the whole framing is so constructed that it forms a mould to cast all the steps and landings, from floor, in monolithic form, or one piece. When the positions of half spaces or other Jointed Nosiko Mould TftTH "KisER Board. NO. 21. landings are set out on the walls, strong planks are fixed" on edges so as to give fixing joints for the car- riage and outer strings. The strings are then fixed to act as guides for fixing the centring, risers and nos- ing moulds. "Where practicable, the outer string should be so arranged in the fixing that it can be taken off after the concrete is firm without disturbing the cen- tring. This allows the returned ends of the steps to be cleared off while the work is green. The carriage boards are fixed from landing to landing. Illustra- tion No. 22 shows the forms and positions of the vari- HOW TO USE THEM 395 S U O 8 a "^ o o ei o a %. 396 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES ous parts, with their names. Bullnoses or curtails and circular parts of nosings are formed in plaster moulds, which are run with several reverse running moulds. Staircases betw.een walls are more simple than open staircases; therefore they are more easj' to frame up. The string boards are cut to the reverse of that used for wood stairs. A string is cut for each wall. The riser boards are then fixed to the wall strings. The centring for the soffits is fixed independently, the boards being laid on fillets which are nailed on each wall. For short flights of steps or common stairs, such as for cellars, etc., string boards may be dispensed with. The positions and sizes of the risers, treads, soffits and landings are first set out and marked on the walls. Riser fillets are then nailed on the walls, taking care to keep each fillet in a line with the riser mark, and to allow for the thickness of the riser boards which are subsequently nailed on the inner sides of the fillets. Riser boards for winders are generally hung on long fillets and then nailed on the walls. Long fillets ex- tending upwards enable the work to be easier and more strongly fixed, as they cover more brick joints than if cut to the exact height of the riser. Centring for Landings mid Soffits. — Centring for landings and the soffits of stairs should be made strong and true. The timber should be well seasoned, to pre- vent warping or shrinkage. The outer angles of land- ings should be supported by strong wood props, not only to carry another prop for the landing above. All centrings should be made perfectly rigid, to stand the weight of the concrete and the ramming. Great care should be taken that the timber framing is securely supported, as any defiection will not only throw the HOW TO USB THEM 397 work out of level, but will also tend to crack the con- crete. The principal props should be cut about % inch shorter than the exact height. They are placed on a solid bed, the ^-inch space at top being made up with two wedges, the thin' ends being inserted in opposite directions and gently driven home from each side until the exact height is obtained. If it is dif- ficult to get the top of the prop, the wedges can be inserted at the bottom. The use of the wedges will be seen when the centring is struck.' If there are winders in the stairs, the centring for the sofRt will be more or less circle on circle. This form of centring is done by lathing, with 1-inch boards, cut to a taper, the surface being made fair with a gauged lime and hair. .Rough 1%-inch boards are used for the centring. This should be close- jointed. Open joints or sappy timber act as a sieve, and allow. liquid cement to drip through, thus robbing the concrete of its strength. Waterproof Centring.i — The following is a method that has been used with marked success for the sof- fits of stairs, landings and the ceilings of floors. The initial cost of preparing is small, and is repaid with interest, by the decreased cost of setting and the in- creased strength and solidity. For ordinary work, such as warehouses, etc., it is very suitable, as a fin- ished surface is formed, and no setting required. It seems strange that, when casting concrete work out of a wood or a plaster mould, the mould is seasoned, and every precaution taken, not only to stop suction, but also to prevent the escape of liquid cement ; but when casting a large surface in situ (where every precau- tion should be taken to obtain the maximum of strength), any kind of centring (which is a mould) 398 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES is thought good enough, if only sufficiently strong to carry the concrete till set. I am aware that many workers in concrete " think that an open or porous centring is a benefit instead of a defect, simply be- cause it affords an escape for excess of water. But why have excess of water at all? There is no gain in time or strength, but a direct loss in both points. The excess water descends through the concrete by force of direct gravitation, and always carries a cer- tain amount of liquid cement with it to the centring, leaving the aggregate more or less bare, and the body of the concrete weak. A part of the liquid cement also oozes through the joints and crevices, which leaves the skin of the concrete bare and broken. There is no reason or excuse for excess water, and it is simply the result of ignorant or careless gauging, which is not only a waste of time, water and cement, but a loss in the ultimate strength, and the cause of cracks. Porous centring is also a dirty process. The overhead drip, drip, is neither good for the workmen nor the material underneath. The process of forming the rough centring boards watertight is simple and expeditious, being done by laying the rough board surface with a thin coat of gauged plaster ; and when the centring has been struck the plaster will come with the boards, leaving the con- crete with a fair face. The ramming forces a certain amount of water to the lower surface or centring, and this is so close and fine that it takes an exact impress of it ; consequently the truer and smoother the centring the truer and smoother the concrete surface. The film of water indurates the skin of the concrete and prevents surface or water cracks. It will be noticed when filling HOW TO USE THEM 399 in dry or porous plaster moulds that the concrete cast produced has a surface either friable when newly cast, or when dry the surface is full of small water lines, like a map, or a broken spider's web. This is owing to the suction caused by the porous nature of the mould and the water escaping through the weak or open parts leaving corresponding lines on the concrete' surface. These defects are obviated by usiag waterproof cen- tring. "Where fineness of finish is not required, such as ware- house floors, the surface can be made sufficiently fair and smooth when filling in the concrete without sub- sequent setting. The plaster is laid on the centring, and made fair and smooth, and then the surface is saturated with water to correct the suction; or the surface, if dry, may be brushed over with a thin soap solution to prevent adhesion. On this surface a coat of neat cement about % inch is laid, and on this the concrete is placed. T*he two unite in one body, and when set, and the centring struck, the plaster sheet comes with the boards, leaving a smooth surface. This surface can be made in color by lime washing, which will also give more light, pr a finished white surface can be obtained by substituting parian or other white cement for the neat Portland cement. The concrete must not be laid until the white cement is firm, not set, otherwise the concrete will force its way in thin or soft parts and disfigure the surface. I have success- fully used this method for obtaining a finished sur- face when encasing iron girders with concrete for fire- proof purposes. Staircase Materials. — "With regard to the materials for a concrete staircase, no one who intends to eon- 400 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES struct them substantially, fireproof and economically, can afford to use common substances, when by judi- cious selection and for a trifling additional first cost a combination of, materials can be obtained, which, if not (strictly speaking) fireproof, is at least the most incombustible constructive compound known. This is a quality of the most vital importance in modern house construction. Portland cement and slag cement are the best known matrices. The finer Portland cement is ground, the greater its heat-resisting powers. Slag cement is lighter than Portland cement, and its fire- resisting properties exceed those of both gypsum and Portland cement. But as its manufacture is as yet somewhat limited, and its strength not uniform, ex- ceptional care must be exercised in testing its general qualities before using it for staircases. Broken slag, firebricks, clinkers and pottery ware are the best ag- gregates, being practically fireproof. All should be clean, and in various graduating sizes, from that of a pin's head to that of ^ walnut, for roughing out with. The topping should be the same as that described for Eureka paving. Filling in Stairs. — Before gauging the materials, sweep out all dust in the interior of the framing and the wall chase and then wet the latter, and oil the woodwork. If the wood of the nosing moulds and risers is sappy or open grained, the long lengths, be- fore being cut and fixed, should be made smooth and indurated by coating with a solution of hot parafiin wax. The smoother and less absorbent the surface of the wood, the more readily and cleaner will the mould leave the cast work. Paraffin also renders the wood damp-proof, thus pr^y^nting swelling or warping. For HOW TO USE THEM 401 ordinarj'- purposes one or two coats of paraffin oil' will be found sufSeient. This should be done two or three hours before the steps are filled in, so as to allow the oil to partly dry in and stop the pores of the wood. If the wood absorbs all the oil, and has a dry sur- face, brush the surface again with paraffin, using a semi-dry brush. This should be done as the work pro- ceeds. If the surface is over wet, the oil mixes with the cement, thus causing a more or less rough sur- face. Soap solution may be safely used for rough concrete, or where a rough surface is left to be sub- sequently set. In the latter case the surface must be well wetted with water and scrubbed before the final coat is applied. Soap solution may also be used for rough framing, such as soffit boards, but soap should not be used for fine concrete or a finished surface, as it leaves a film of grease which has a tendency to prevent the cement adhering when clearing up or mak- ing good the finished surface. As the work of filling proceeds, the surface should be brushed over with a slip, that is, neat cement, to fill up all angles, and obtain a surface free from "bulbs" and ragged ar- rises. The coarse concrete for roughing out the stairs is composed of 1 part of Portland cement and 3 parts of coarse fireproof aggregate. These materials must be gauged stiff and laid in small portions of about a pail- ful at a time, taking' care to thoroughly consolidate by ramming and beating with a wooden mallet, using a wooden punner or punch to get into the angles and deep parts. "When the first layer, which may be about 3 inches thick, is rammed, another layer is deposited and rammed, and so on until the rough stuff is within 402 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES % inch of the line of tread. It must not be omitted to 'brush the strings, treads and nosing moulds with slip as the work proceeds. This is most effectually done by the aid of a tool-brush. Cax-e must be exercised when ramming stairs with mallets or punches that the mallet or other implement used is not too large or too heavy, for it would most likely cause the framing to bulge out, and the form of the work would be irre- trievably spoilt. During the operation of ramming some of the water and a part of the constituent of the cement is forced upwards, and leaves a thin, smooth, clayey film on the surface, which prevents the adhesion of the next layer. For this reason the successive lay- ers should be deposited before the previous one is set, and the topping should be laid while the coarse con- crete is yet green. Too much stress cannot be laid upon the importance of topping the rough coat while it is green. This is one of the secrets of success of solid and strong work, so no more rough stuff should be laid than can be topped before the rough is set. The fine stuff for the topping is the same as for Eureka paving, viz., 1 part of cement to 2 parts of fine aggregate, gauged firm and plastic. The tread is made level and fair by means of a running mould so formed that it bears on the nosing moulds above and below the tread. The mould has a metal plate or "shoe" fixed so as to run and form the tread. The shoe projects so that it will work under the riser board close up to the concrete riser. Illustration No. 23 shows a sec- tion of steps with the mould in position; also a sec- tion of the nosing mould and soffit boards and car- riage. The end of the slipper next to the wall is cut short to allow the niovild to run close up to the wall. .A HOW TO USE THEM 403 section of a T iron is shown as sometimes used as an in- ternal support. Iron is used for long steps, or where stairs are intended for heavy trafSc. Iron helps to sup- — Sections of Framin(i ok Soffit op Stair, Riser And Noser Mould, with Concrete anp Tread- Run- RING Mould in Position. Na 2S. port the concrete until set; it is placed in alternate steps, or in every third or fourth step, according to the length of step. Ordinary sized steps require no iron, 404 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES unless as a support for the concrete while green, and during the process of making. Finishing Stairs. — When the treads are firm after being run, the upper part of the nosing moulds are removed, the surface and joists trowelled off. The ad- vantages of having the nosing mould in two parts will thus be seen, as it allows the joint at this most notice- able part to be neatly cleaned off while the work is green. The lower part of the mould will support the concrete nosing during the finishing of the tread and until the concrete is set. If the work is done with a nosing mould' in one piece, which necessitates, its being left on until the concrete is set, the joint has then to be filed down and stopped, and however well done, has a patchy appearance. When the treads are finished, and the work set, but not dry, the riser and string boards are taken off, the joints made good, and the returned end of the steps cleaned off. If the stuff has been properly gauged and rammed, there should be little or no making good required, but it is important that if necessary it should be done while the work is green. A thin layer of neat cement will not adhere on a dense and dry body of concrete. The only way to obtain perfect cohesion is to cut the damaged surface out to a depth of not less than ^4 inch, then thoroughly wet it, brush the surface with liquid cement, and fill it in with gauged cement. No traffic should be allowed on the treads during the process of setting and harden- ing. The work is further protected and hardened by covering with sacks kept wet for several days by fre- quent watering. Where there are several flights of stairs to construct, there should not be less than three sets of strings and riser boards, which will enable the HOW TO USE THEM 405 carpenter to fix one set while the plasterers are filling in and cleaning off the others. Non-Slippery Steps. — Incessant traffic tends to make the treads of steps more or less slippery. In order to obviate this, the surface is inden1;ed with a concrete roller, similar to that used for some kinds of paving. Another way is to form three or four V-shaped grooves fr6m 1 inch to 2 inches apart on the treads while the concrete is moist. Another way is to insert leaden cubes about 1 inch square from 2 to 3 inches apart in the surface of the treads. Well-seasoned, hard wooden blocks, about the same size as the lead and fixed in a similar way, keeping the end grain vertical, are also used for this purpose. India rubber and cork cubes may also be used. Striking Centrings. — This should not be attempted until all the other work, with the exception of finishing the soffits, is done. It will be understood that the framing can be arranged so that the string and riser boards can be taken off without disturbing the soffit centring, which is kept up as long as possible. The time for striking centring greatly depends upon the class of cement used, the manner of gauging and lay- ing the concrete, and the temperature; but generally speaking, centring should not be struck for at least ten days. A stair between the walls can be struck much sooner than one having only one bearing by which its own weight is carried. I have seen a stair, with steps projecting 3 feet 6 inches from the wall, cleared of all supports in five days from the time of filling in ; but this was with good cement, gauged 1 part to 2 of aggregate, and in warm weather, and the stair was strengthened with T iron. 406 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES The centring and framing for a flight of stairs should, where practicable, be independent of other stairs above or below, so that they can be struck in due rotation. The wedges of the main props should be gradually withdrawn. This tends to avoid the sudden jar which otherwise often happens when the centring is too sud- denly struck. The sudden removal of centring and the inflexible nature of concrete are the cause of body cracks. The damage caused by the sudden jar may not be seen at the time, but it will be eventually devel- oped by the force of expansion, which always finds out the weak spots. Concrete and Iron. — Iron pipes, bars and T pieces are sometimes used with concrete stairs where the steps are long, or where landings have little support from walls. They help to carry the dead weight until the mass is thoroughly set, and also prevent sudden de- flection if the centring is struck too soon. "When iron pipes are used for steps they should go right into the wall chase. Iron T pieces are used for long landings. Care must be taken that, if the iron is used, no part should be left exposed. It must be embedded in the concrete to protect it from oxidization and the effects of fire. When iron girders, etc., are partly exposed, they should be painted. Iron bars or pipes are occa- sionally used to strengthen the outer strings of spandrel stairs. The iron is laid in the moist concrete near and along the string, having the ends projecting into the walls or landings. Angle irons are often used for unsupported concrete angles. Iron pipes, bars or joists are used as integral supports for landings and floors having unsupported ends. The tensile strength of bar iron is materially in- HOW TO USE THEM 407 creased by twisting. A bar I/2 inch square with three twists per foot will gain about 50 per cent, in tensile strength when embedded in concrete, and give a corre- sponding strength to the concrete. A combination of iron and concrete is of special service where space is limited. For instance, if a beam or landing requires a certain thickness to carry a given weight, and it is inconvenient or difficult to obtain that thickness, the requisite degree of strength with a seduced thickness may be obtained by the combination of both materials. This gives the combined iron and concrete a useful ad- vantage over stone. It is important to secure the full strength of the iron, and that none be lost or neutral- ized. In order to obtain the full strength the iron shoiild be judiciously placed. Thus, a piece of iron surrounded by twenty times its sectional area of con- crete would increase the weight-sustaining power of the iron in the centre and would have its strength in- creased about twice. If the same quantity .of iron was placed in several pieces, so as to throw as much tensile strain on the iron as possible, the strength would be increased nearly four times. In order that none of the strength be lost or neutralized, the iron should be placed near the lower surface ; if fixed higher, they are nearer the axis of neutral stress, and are correspond- ingly less effective. The use of iron in concrete is in- valuable for many constructive purposes, but for gen- eral work, unless as a temporary aid and in a few ex- ceptional cases, it is unnecessary. For all other things being equal, the huge board of reserve strength in good concrete is alone sufficient to sustain as great if not a greater weight than that sustained by natural stone. No other artificial compound exceeds the strength of the 408 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES natural substance, as does artificial stone composed of Portland cement concrete. Setting Concrete Soffits. — The soffits of stairs and landings, if heat cement has been used on a water- proof centring, as already described, only require a lit- tle stopping and coloring, but for work done on rough centring a setting coat has to be laid. This is usually done with neat Portland cement, though it is frequently gauged with lime f)utty to make it work more freely. The siirface should be well roughened and wetted, to give a key and obtain perfect cohesion. It requires great care and time to make a good and true surface with Portland cement on a body of concrete, espe- cially if the concrete is dry, which is generally the case where there are several flights of steps in a stair- case, and the setting of the soffits and landings are left to the last part of the work. I have obtained equally good results by using Parian or other white cements for setting the soffits of staircases. When using white cements for this purpose it is better to brush the concrete surface with liquid cement before laying the gauged cement. The laying trowel should follow the brush, or at least before the liquid cement dries in. This not only secures better cohesion, but tends to prevent the setting coat peeling when trowel- ling it off. Soffits are sometimes set with gauged put- ty. This is like putting a beggar on horseback, and the work is never satisfactory. Fibrous Concrete. — As already mentioned, canvas and other fibrous materials may be advantageously used with Portland cement for several purposes. Can- vas forms a good ground for a setting coat on concrete surfaces. It gives a uniform and strong key, prevents HOW TO USE THEM 409 surface cracks, and the final coat from peeling. Coarse canvas cut to convenient sizes is used. It is laid on the centring, and held in position with tacks, or with the same kind of cement as intended for the final coat. The canvas is then brushed with liquid cement, and then the concrete is laid while the canvas is moist, so that the whole will form one compact body. When the centring is struck, the fibrous concrete surface is rough- ened with a sharp and fine drag, so as to raise the fibre of the canvas, thua giving a fine, regular and strong key. This surface requires less material for the final coat than the ordinary concrete surface. If tacks are used they must be extracted before the final coat is laid, to avoid discoloration. The rough concrete and the white surface coat may also be done in one opera- tion. The centring is made fair and smooth, and then oiled with chalk oil. The white cement is gauged stiff and laid on the centring. Coarse canvas is then laid on and well brushed with liquid cement. When this is firm (but not set) the surface is again brushed, and then the concrete is laid. The concrete is deposited in two or more layers. The first must not be too thick, taking care that it is well rammed or pressed on the moist canvas surface without disturbing the white ce- ment. After the centring is struck any defects on the surface are made good. The surface may be then left white, or painted, or polished as required. Polished Soffits. — SofiSts, landings and strings of con- crete stairs that are finished in white cement may be polished. The material may be tinted, or left in its natural white or creamy color. Polished cement work is always bright, and has a lustre like marble. Be- ing diirable and easily cleaned, it is more sanitary and 410 CEMENTS AND CONGKETES cheaper than paint. The polishing is done the same way as described for "white work." Concrete Staircases and Fibrous Plaster. — Fibrous plaster is well adapted for concrete surfaces when an enriched finish is desirable. I have introduced this material for decorating the soffits of steps and land- ings; also the strings of concrete stairs. By this method the soffits may also be enriched, and strings can be panelled, or enriched with medallions or foliage, as re- quired. The soffits may also be enriched with modelled work done in situ, with some of the white cements, or with plaster and tow. The strings may be decorated with hand-wrought gesso. In order to obtain a fixing or keying substance that will receive nails or screws to sustain the fibrous plaster, a rough plan of the de- sign, or rather the fixing points, is set out on the in- side of the centring before the concrete is laid. On these plans wood plugs, fillets or concrete fixing blocks are laid, and held in position with nails, plaster or ce- ment until the concrete is laid and set. Care must be exercised when fixing the plugs or fillets that the centring will leave freely without disturbing the plugs, etc. Dowel Holes. — Cutting dowel holes in concrete to receive iron or wood balusters is a slow and tedious process. They are best formed by means of wooden plugs, which are fixed before treads; the plugs are driven into the rough concrete before it is set, leaving them flush with the line of tread, so that when the topping is laid they will not be in the way. Plugs are best fixed by the aid of a wooden gauge. The gauge is made the same thickness as the topping, the length being equal to the distance between the nosing HOW TO USB THEM 411 mould and the riser boards and as wide as will admit of plug holes and the plugs to be driven through. The plugs are made a little larger than the baluster ends to allow for the lead. The gauge is laid on the rough concrete, using the returned-nosing as a guide, and then driving the plugs flush with the top of the gauge. The gauge is then lifted up and laid on the next step, and so on until the finish. This method is accurate and saves measuring and marking the position of each hole on every step. When balusters are fixed on the ends of the steps, the plugs are fixed on the inside of the outer string. The plugs are generally left in until the balusters are ready for fixing. A ready method for forming "lewis" holes or other undercut sink- ings in concrete is performed by casting wedge-shaped blocks of plaster of the required form and size, and then laying them in the desired positions while the concrete is soft. When the concrete is set, the plaster blocks can then be easily cut out, leaving the under- cut sinking as desired. Summary of Staircases Constructed "in Situ." — It will be seen from the foregoing that the operations em- ployed in the construction of concrete staircases formed m situ are: (1) setting out'^the stairs and landing; (2) fixing the wood framing; (3) gauging the materials and filling in; (4) removing the framing; (5) cleaning up the treads, risers and strings; (6) striking the soffit centring and finishing the soffits; (7) protecting and wetting the work until set and hard. Cast Steps. — Staircases are also constructed with steps cast separately, and then built in, in the same way as stone. Illustration No. 24 shows various sections of steps. Fig. 1 is a spandrel step, which may be used 412 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES for model dwellings, factories, etc. The tread is grooved to afford a good footing and prevent dipping. The dotted line indicates a square seating or tail-end of the step, which is embedded in the wall. Fig. 2 is a square step. Pig. 3 is a step with a moulded and returned Fig. I. Fig. 2. Fig-3. Fig. 4. Sections of Steps. NO. 24. nosing. Pig. 4 is a similar step, but having a moulded soffit. For cast work these steps must have a square seating or tail-end, as indicated by the dotted lines on Fig. 1, so as to bond into the wall. Treads and Risers. NO. 25 Treads and Risers. — Stairs between walls are some- times fprnied with treads and risers. The treads and risers are cast and built in as the construction of the work proceeds. Sometimes they are let into chases and pinned after the walls are built. Illustration No, 25 shows a section of treads and risers. HOW TO USE THEM 413 Closed Outer Strings.— StairceLses are sometimes fin- ished with a close outer string, which prevents dirt or wet falling 'into the well. Illustration No. 26 shows the section, Fig. 1, and the elevation, Pig. 2, of a moulding outer string. The dotted line at A indicates a dowel hole for the balusters. Outer strings, whether plain or moulded, are much stronger when formed in Fig; I. NO. 26. Fig. a. situ. This is best effected by fixing a reverse mould at each side, then filling in the space from the top. The top is finished by hand and the aid of a template. The dowel holes are formed as already descrilDed. Concrete Floors. — It has been mentioned that the Romans, in the time of Julius Caesar, were in the habit of constructing their floors and roofs, as well as their walls, of concrete. According to an article in Archaeolo- gia, the cementitious agent was pozzolana. The lime 414 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES was obtained by burning "traverstine. ' ' The aggregate usually consisted of broken tufa for walls, of broken lava for foundations where great strength was I'e- quired, and of broken pumice where lightness was es- sential. The floors were generally constructed of large slabs of concrete, supported on sleeper brick walls. The upper surface was finished with a layer of finer concrete and mosaic. The roofs were made flat, rest- ing on brick pillars. The first known English patent fireproof construction was obtained by one Dekins Bull, in 1633 ; but as at that period patentees were not com- pelled to disclose what their patents covered, no de- scription of the materials and methods can be given. Up to the middle of the eighteenth century fireproof their great weight and cost, were seldom used. But towards the close of that century cast-iron girders and segmental brick arches were gradually coming into use where strength was essential. Up to a century ago plaster was largely employed as a floor material. In floors usually consisted of brick arches, but owing to 1778 Earl Stanhope invented pugging for rendering wooden floors fireproof. By this process fillets were jjaled to the joists at about one-third of the height. Laths were laid on the fillets and plastered above and below with a coat of lime and chopped hay. The under sides of the joists were then lathed and plastered in the usual way to form the ceiling. About tlie early part of the last century wrought iron joists were substituted for cast iron girders. Pox & Barret's floor, designed about 1830, was the first in which an attempt was made to protect the exposed faces of the iron' joists with a fire-resisting material. Hornblower's floor is one of the earliest for resisting the effects of fire. Iron, bricks now TO USB THEM 415 and plaster are chiefly used in the French and Ameri- can systems. For the sake of simplicity and reference, concrete floors may be divided into three kinds: (1) "Joist floors," in which the concrete is laid slid be- tween the joists; (2) "Tabular floors," formed with fireclay tubes or hollow lintels placed "between the joists and covered with concrete; (3) "Slab floors," formed in one piece or slab. Portland cement concrete laid in situ on and between iron joists is extensively used for fire-resisting structures. Cast concrete is used for some parts of tabular floors. Cast concrete blocks are used for the ceiling surface, and as a support for the rough concrete floor surface. The blocks are hol- low, and have male and female dovetails on the sides. The ceiling surface of the floors and the outer surfaces of the partitions are finished with a thin setting coat of gauged putty or Parian. The chief objects of fire- proof floors are to render each floor capable of resist- ing the effects of fire, so that fire cannot be communi- cated from one floor to another, and by making the roof fireproof, to prevent the fire from spreading from one compartment to another; to gain additional strength, so as to avoid as far as possible lateral thrust on the walls, and to secure the building from attacks and effects of both dry rot and damp. There have been about a hundred patents for fireproof floors during the past generation, of which about five or six survive. Plaster Floors. — -Plaster concrete, that is, plaster and broken bricks, or similar aggregates, also neat plaster, were at one ■ time used largely for the formation ox floors. The use of plaster floors was common in somr; districts, and up to a century ago the rough plaster, known as "floor plaster," was in general use where 416 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES gypsum was found in abundance. Plaster floors were rarely used on the ground level, because they could not resist moisture, which caused them to become soft and retain the damp. They were principally used for up- per" floors. The gauged plaster was laid upon reeds. These reeds were spread upon the tops of joists, and over them was laid straw to keep the soft plaster from percolating through the reeds. The floors were about 3 inches thick, floated fair, and finished the following day. Wood strips were placed around the walls, and drawn out when the plaster began to set, to allow for ihe expansion of the plaster. The materials being so iight, the timbers were less in size and number than those now in use. The joists were in some instances 3% inches by 2% inches, fixed wide apart, axid sup- ported by small beams about 4i/^ inches by 3^ inches, The undersides between the joists were made fair by plastering the reeds, but in the better class of work the joists were covered with reeds, and held in position with oak laths, and plastered. Bullock's blood was used to harden the floors after they were dry. In some in- stances they were coated with linseed oil to increase their hardness. Their use is now practically super- seded by Portland cement concrete. Joist Concrete Floors. — For this form of floor the concrete is laid between, over and under the iron joists Beyond the supervision of the fixing of the centring and the gauging of the materials, little skilled labor is required. The rough concrete is laid between and partly under the iron joists, which are fixed from 3 feet to 5 feet apart, according to the span and strength of the joists. The centring is supported, or rather hung, by the aid of timber laid across the joists and secured HOW TO USE THEM 417 by bolts. The materials are generally Portland ce- ment and gravel, coke-breeze, clinkers and broken bricks, gauged in the proportion of 1 part of matrix to 5 of aggregate. Sand equal to one-third of the bulk should be added. Coke-breeze is weak, light and elastic, but combustible and porous. A mixture of gravel and breeze in equal proportions is better than either alone. The proportion of cement varies accord- ing to the span and class of aggregate. All other things being equal, the strength of concrete is influ- enced by the strength of the aggregate, so that it would take a greater proportion of cement to make coke-breeze concrete equal in strength to a concrete made with hard aggregate, such as granite, slag or brick. The upper surface of this class of floor may be finished with wood, tiles or fine concrete, as re- quired. Joist concrete floors have been largely used. This is principally owing to their supposed cheap- ness, but it is more than probable that, in the event of fire, they would be dear in the end, because the lower part of the flanges are barely protected from the effects of fire, as the concrete, being thin at these parts, and also on a comparatively smooth surface, would soon crack or scale off, and leave the flanges of the joists exposed to the ravages of fire. They are also, more or less conductors of sound. Caminus concrete cement is an excellent material for the construction of fireproof ceilings and partitions. Caminus Concrete Cement. — This material is specially designed to produce, a hard and practically indestructi- ble concrete for the construction of fireproof floors and walls. It is manufactured from a waste product, and all inflammable material, such as coke-breeze, being en- 418 CEMENTS. AND CONCRETES tirely dispensed with, the concrete is thoroughly fire- resisting. It is lighter and much cheaper than Port- land cement concrete, and is perfectly free from ex- pansion and contraction whilst setting. It can be man- ufactured to set in a few hours, so that the centres can be struck the day after the floor is laid. It can be supplied in a ready aggregated condition, so that the bags may be hoisted direct to the floor where the con- crete is being laid, and gauged on the floor, thus sav- ing a great amount of waste, and also labor in handling, mixing and laying. Concrete Floors and Coffered Ceilings. — A method was patented by E. Ransom for decreasing quantity of material and yet obtaining equal strength in floors. The floor is divided by a series of beams at right angles to each other, so as to form a series of coffers in the ceiling. For instance, for a floor 12 inches thick, the floor proper would be about 4 inches thick, and beams about 3 inches thick and 8 inches deep — a rod of twist- ed iron being placed in the centre 'of the thickness, and near the lower surface of the beams. The beams are generally about 2 feet 6 inches from centre to centre. The method of construction is as follows: First, form a platform or centring; on this a series of core -boxes 2 feet 3 inches is placed, 3 inches apart, so as to form a 3-ineh beam. The core boxes must be tapered and their upper edges rounded, so that they will draw when the centring is struck. The size of the core boxes may be altered to suit the size and requirements of the floor. With regard to the iron bars, the inventor says : "It is of vital importance for the strength of the struc- ture that the iron bars be placed no higher in the beam than calculated for; that the longitudinal centre of HOW TO USE THEM 419 these bars should be at the lowest point; and it is ad- visable that the bars curve upwards slightly and uni- formly each way from the centre to the ends, so that the ends are from 1 to 3 inches higher than the cen- tres. By preparing the concrete bed on a correspond- ing curve, the natural sag of the bar, as it is being handled to its place, gives all the requisite facility to accomplish this purpose. No crooked or irregular twisted iron must be used; otherwise, when the strain comes upon it, it will perforce straighten and lengthen out, and weaken the structure in so doing. After placing, the iron, the rest of the concrete is tamped in place, and the whole made to form a monolithic block. It is of vital importance that no stop be made in the placing of concrete from the time the beam is begun until the thickness of the beam is in place and a 'through joint' is made. The web and the thickness must be one solid piece of homogeneous concrete. ' ' Combined Concrete Floors and Panelled Ceilings. — A combined floor and panelled ceiling may also be formed in concrete. This is executed as follows: First, form a level platform or centring, and on this fix the re- verse plaster mould, run and mitred, according to the design of the ceiling. The intervening panels are then made up with framing, and the concrete filled in the usual way, and when set the centring and reverse mould are removed, and the ceiling cleared off. If de- sired, a finely finished and smooth white surface may be obtained by coating the surface of the moulds and panels with firmly gauged Parian, or other white ce- ment, until about % inch thick, and when this is firm (but not set), the rough concrete is deposited in layers and tamped to consolidate the concrete, and unite it 420 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES with the white cement. The surface may also be fin- ished with fibrous concrete. The method of doing this, also, for carrying out the above white cement process, is described in "Fibrous Concrete." Concrete and Wood. — Concrete floors finished with flooring boards require special care to prevent damp or dry rot. There are various methods in use for fixing and keeping the flooring boards- from contact with the rough concrete, one way being to fix wood fillets to the joists by means of wedges or clamps. Another way is to embed wood fillets or fixing blocks in the rough concrete, leaving them projecting above the level of the iron joists, to give a bearing and fixing points to the flooring boards; or fine coke-breeze, concrete or plas- ter screeds, may be laid at intervals on the rough concrete, onto which the boards are nailed. Fixing blocks, concrete or plaster screeds, are preferable to wood fillets, as they do not shrink or rot, and will better resist fire. All these methods leave intervening spaces between the concrete and the hoards, and unless thoroughly ventilated, they harbor vermin, dirt and stagnant air. Unless the wood is thoroughly seasoned, and the boards grooved and tongued, dust and ef- fluvia will find egress through the joints. A portion of dust and water when sweeping and washing the fioors also finds egress through the joists; and as the concrete will not absorb the water, or allow the dust to escape, they accumulate and become unseen dangers. These sanitary evils may be obviated, or at least reduced to a minimum, by laying the boards direct on the con- crete. This not only forms a solid floor with no inter- spaces, but admits of- thin boards being used with as much if not greater advantage than a thick board. HOW TO USE THEM 421 There is no uneven springing between the joists, which causes friction and opening of the joints, and the whole thickness is available for wear. There is also less total depth of floor, consequently less height of building and general cost. Another important advantage of a solid floor is that it will resist fire better than one with hol- low spaces. It is here that the sponginess and elasticity of coke-breeze concrete as a top layer is of special service, and where it may be utilized with advantage. Owing to its being able to receive and retain nails, the boards can be nailed at any desired place. Wood blocks for parquet floors can also be bedded or screwed on the concrete surface. Flooring boards will lie even and solid on this surface, and if a thin layer of felt or slag-wool be spread on the concrete before the boards are laid, a firm and noiseless floor is obtained. Slag- wool is an imperishable non-conductor of heat, cold and sound, and it will not harbor vermin. If the work is in humid climate, the coke-breeze surfacfe when dry should be coated with a solution of tar and pitch, to prevent atmospheric moisture being absorbed by the porous coke-breeze. Concrete Drying. — To prevent dry rot It is of the ut- most importance that the concrete should be thoroughly free from moisture before the flooring boards are laid and fixed. The drying of concrete is a question of time, which depends upon the amount of water used for gauging, the thickness and the temperature. It may take from three days to three weeks or even three months. The drying can be accelerated by directing currents of hot air on the lower surface, or by laying some absorbent material, such as dry sawdust or brick dust, on the upper surface, As soon as the surface 422 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES moisture is absorbed, or the dry material has no further absorbent power, it should be removed to allow the mass to be air dried. Another way is to lay the floor in two coats, and to allow" one coat to dry before the other is laid. For instance, if the floor is to be 6 inches thick, the first coat is laid with rough, but strong concrete, the aggregate being the best available ; but taking gravel and coke-breeze to be the most plentiful, it will be best to assimilate and combine the good qualities of each to equalize their defects by mix- ing them in equal proportions. If brick is plentiful, and broken to properly graduated sizes, it will give better results than gravel or breeze. The mixed ag- gregate is gauged 5 parts to 1 of cement, and laid 4% inches thick, and gently but firmly beaten in situ, the surface being left rough to give a key for the second coat. The second coat is not laid until the first is dry, and consists of one part cement to 5 of sifted and damped coke-breeze, gauged stiff, and laid 1% inches thick, beaten in situ, ruled level, and any ridges being laid fair with a long hand-float. The moisture of the second coat, by reason of the density of the first coat, will only, be absorbed to a small degree, while the greater portion will be taken up by the atmosphere, and enable the eonibined coats to dry sooner than if laid in one. The first coat should be laid as soon as the roof is on, so as to give all possible time for- it to dry, and the second coat to be laid and dried before the flooring is laid. When coke-breeze is not avail- able for the second coat, use soft brick, broken- to pass through a 3-16-inch sieve. The method of laying floors in two coats is only given as an alternative plan, and as an example of a process used in some parts. Greater HOW TO USE THEM 423 strength, as a whole, and more perfect cohesion be- tween the two coats, is obtained by laying the second coat as soon as the first is laid, or at least while it is green. Concrete Slab Floors. — The term, slab floor, is applied to a concrete floor formed in situ, and in one piece or slab. It must not be confounded with slab pavements, which are constructed with a number of small cast slabs. Slab floors are usually made without exterior iron supports, but in a few instances iron T pieces or bars have been used as internal supports. Bearing in mind the lasting properties of the old Eoman slab floors, and the enormous strength of the modern exam- ples at home, which are unsupported by iron, and are practically indestructible, it seems strange that they are not in more general use, and that for some inexplica- ble reason preference is given to shrinking, rotting and combustible floorSj composed of poor iron and tim- ber instead of the best work and material, which, if a lit- tle dearer at first, is infinitely superior and vastly cheaper in the long run. The great sanitary advan- tages and fire and damp resisting powers of concrete slab floors are the highest known. The construction of slab floors is simple, and similar in many respects to that already described for stair landing? and ordinary concrete and joist floors. There are several methods of supporting the floors, the first and most common being to leave a sand course or to cut a horizontal chase in the walls to receive the ends of the floors. The second is to lay the floors when the walls are floor high, and build the higher walls on it wheii set. This method, while making sound work, is not always prac- ticable or convenient, owing to the delay in building 424 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES while waiting for the floors to set. The third method is to build corbelled ledges in the walls, so as to carry the floors. The centring for slab floors should be per- fectly rigid, water-tight and slightly cambered towards the ceiling centre. This camber gives more strength to the floor, and lessens liability to crack when remov- ing the centring. If joists are not used, the centring is supported on wall boards and centre struts. An- other way which gives great additional strength is to form the centring level, but having all the edges at the wall rounded off, so as to form the floor like an in- verted sink or tray. The horizontal chases in this case should be made wider than the thickness of the floor to allow for a thickness of rim. - The extra width of chase, which may be one or two bricks thick, according to the width of span, is made below the centring or line of ceiling, the angles being coved by rounding the edges of centring. The coved rim gives greater strength with a less thickness of floor. The cove may be left plain or used for a cove for a plaster cornice, or rough- ened and used as a bracket for the same purpose. The expansion of concrete floors having large areas, or where hot cement has been used, has been known to disturb the walls^ causing cracks and displacement of brick and stone work. This may be prevented- by isolating the floor ends from the walls. This is done by forming expansion partitions or linings in the chases, the linings being composed of slag, felt or wood shav- ings, straw, reeds or other compressible material. The chase should be sufficiently deep to allow for a com- pressible lining about 1% inches thick, and a fair bed for the slab floor. Care must be taken to leave a few half bricks solid at intervals, say from 3 to 4 feet HOW TO USB THEM 425 apart, to support the upper walls until the floor is set. Compressible linings may be used for floors supported on corbelled ledges; and when the expansion, and in many cases subsequent contraction, has finally finished, the linings can be taken out, and the vacant space filled up with fine concrete, or utilized as a ground key for cement skirtings. If girder or iron posts are iso- lated from the walls by means of compressible linings, the eflFects of expansion and sound are limited. In some instances a judicious use of iron may be made. For instance, large areas may be divided with three or four rolled iron joists, so as to form shorter spans or smaller bays. Joists tend to bind the walls together, and to serve as scaffold bearings for building the upper parts of walls. They may also be used for hanging the centring on instead of strutting, or as aids to the strutting. Joists may also be used as integral sup- ports at unsupported ends of concrete floors. They should be so fixed that the lower flanges are not less than 1 inch above the lower surface of the concrete. The whole strength of iron is brought more fully into use by fiLxing it near the lower surface. If fixed near the centre, or at the axis of neutral stress, a correspond- ing part of the strength is comparatively of little value. Construction of. Slab Floors. — Portland cement as a matrix is indispensable. The unequal nature of gravel and coke-breeze renders them unfit and unsafe aggre- gates for this class of work. Broken brick being cheap, and obtainable in most districts, affords a ready aggre- gate, and may be used with safety and success. In ordinary eases of concrete construction, the whole thickness is usually made with one rate of gauge ; but 426 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES for slab floors covering large areas, and unsupported by iron or other supports, exceptional strength is re- quired. Stronger results are obtained by making up the whole thickness with different rates of gauge. Tak- ing the usual gauge for floors as from 4 to 5 parts of aggregate to one of cement, and used for the whole thickness, it gives an unequal strength, a part of which is comparatively of little use, especially at the neutral axis; but if the cement is divided so as to form an ordinary coat in the centre, and stronger coats at the upper and lower surfaces at the points of greatest strain, the upper being compressi'P^e and the lower ten- sive, a better and more accurate arrangement of strength and allowance for disposition of strains is ob- tained. The additional strength at the proper places is obtained not only by the use of additional cement, but by the method of construction, which enables the same quantity of cement as gauged for the usual rate for forming the whole thickness in one coat to be used more profitably. Take the section of an iron joist as an example; this gives divided yet united strength, which sounds paradoxical, but is true. The flanges sustain the greatest strains, and the web comparatively little. "With con- crete, the strong coats at the upper and lower surfaces represent the flanges, and the ordinary coat the web. As already stated, the increased and profltable dis- tribution of strength is obtained by the method of con- struction. For instance, take a slab floor 20 feet by 14 feet and 12 inches thick, without iron joists or other supports, and intended to carry a safe load of 2i/2 ewt. per superficial foot, in addition to its own weight of say, 1 ewt. per square foot. This floor is laid in three coats, HOW TO USE THEM 427 the first composed of 1 part cement and 2 of fine broken bricks gauged stiff, and laid 2 inches thick ; the second composed of 1 part cement and 6 of coarse broken bricks ganged stiff and laid and rammed 8 inches thick ; and the third composed of 1 part cement and 2 of fine broken bricks gauged stiff and laid 2 inches thick. If the upper surface is intended for hard frictional wear a slight difference is made in the gauge and materials. The first coat is composed of 2 parts of cement and 5 of fine broken bricks gauged stiff and laid 2 inches thick ; the second of 1 part cement and 6 of coarse broken bricks gauged stiff and laid and rammed till 8 inches thick ; and the third coat composed of 1 part cement and 2 of fine crushed slag or granite. It will be seen that this constructive method gives the desired positions of strength, and the total quantity of cement in the united gauges is 1 part to 4, and up to 5 parts of aggregate. The fine broken bricks should be passed through a i/^- inch sieve, and the coarse through a 2-inch screen, taking care that the latter contains a greater quantity of the smaller pieces than of the larger. It must be clearly understood that the second coat must be laid before the first is set ; also that the third is laid before the second is set, so as to ensure perfect cohesion be- tween each coat, and the absolute homogeneity of the whole mass. Hollow Floors.— Gveeiter lightness in concrete floors is obtained by the use of concrete tubes. If the tubes are placed apart and in the centre of the floor thickness, a hollow homogeneous concrete slab is formed. The vertical divisions between the tubes connect the upper and lower coats, as with a web of a joist connecting the upper and lower flanges. The method of construction 428 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES is simple and expeditious. For example, for a slab floor 10 inches thick, first lay a coat 2 inches thick of the stronger and finer concrete, as described for the 12-inch slab floor, and when this is firm lay 5 or 6- inch tubes from wall to wall. Bed the sides with rough concrete, and lay another row of tubes parallel with the first row and about 2 inches apart, and so on until the floor area is covered; then make up interspaces with rough concrete till level with the upper surfaces of the tubes, and then cover this with a coat of fine concrete 2 inches thick. Concrete. tubes or common earthenware drain pipes may be used. Half-circle pipes, laid on their side edges, may be used to save concrete and weight in joist floors, etc. Concrete Boofs. — Concrete roofs require special care to render them watertight. Subsidence in the brick work of new buildings is often the cause of cracks on concrete roofs. The roof should have a good camber, to give greater strength and allow for the fall of wa- ter to the outer edges. The rough coat should be laid and well consolidated by ramming or beating, and then left for seven days (the longer the better) before the topping is added. The upper coat should be strongly gauged with fine aggregate, as in "Eureka." If possi- ble, the topping should be laid in one piece. If the area is too large to be laid and finished in one piece, the joints of the bays should overlap. This is done by rebating the screed rules, so as to allow one-half of topping thickness to go under a part of the rule, and form an underlap or ledge about % inch wide, and when the adjoining bay is laid an overlapped but level joint is the result. Roofs exposed to the sun's heat should be kept damp for several days after being laid. HOW TO USE THEM 429 as joints are affected by the heat as well as by deflec- tion of centring or subsidence of walls. Compressible linings or wood strips should be used round the walls to counteract any expansion. All concrete roofs should have a cement skirting 6 inches high and 1 inch thick well keyed into the walls. If linings are not used when the topping is laid, the topping should be turned up on the walls, so as to form a rim, to prevent water get- ting between the roof and the walls. Greater heat and damp-resisting powers are obtained by laying the up- per surface with %-inch thick coat of special concrete, composed of 1 part of Portland cement, % part of~ slaked lime and 1 part of firebrick dust. This should be consolidated with a hand-float, and finished fine and close with a trowel. Notes on Concrete. — ^When calculating the strength of floors, stairs, etc., the following facts should be borne in mind: Portland cement, when new, is too hot; sets more rapidly and expands more than old cement. The finest ground cement is the best and strongest. The time in setting, and in which the maximum strength is attained, varies according to the age of the cement, the quantity of water used, and the mode of gauging and the mean atmospheric temperature. The maximum strength of a briquette of mature cement is maintained, while one of new cement ' ' goes back. ' ' A briquette of matured cement will stand a tension strain of 550 pounds per square inch, and a crushing weight of 6,000 pounds per square inch. A briquette of neat cement is more brittle than one of concrete. Briquettes mature more rapidly than thick slab floors. The adhesive strength of Portland cement is about 85 pounds per square inch. The adhesive strength increases more 430 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES rapidly than the cohesive. A mass with a surface large in proportion to its volume sets more rapidly than a mass with a small area in proportion to its volume. Masses subject to pressure set more rapidly and attain greater hardness than masses not so pressed. The average compressive strength of concrete is about eight times its tension strength. The proportion of com- pressional and tensional strength varies according to the quality and quantity of the aggregate. The strength of concrete depends greatly on the proportion of the matrix and aggregate ; also on the strength of the lat- ter. As regards bricks, it must be remembered that there is a wide difference between the tensile strength of hard, well-burnt bricks and soft stocks. No bricks are so strong as cement, the best kinds being about one-fourth the strength of neat cement. Taking the gauge as one part of cement to 4 of broken brick, the strength of the concrete will be about two-fifths of neat cement, but for safe and practical calculations it will be best to take the strength as one-fourth of neat ce- ment. Square slabs are stronger than rectangular slabs. Slab floors being homogeneous throughout, thfc whole weight is a dead weight, and consequently there is no thrust on the walls. With regard to the live load or weight which floors should be constructed to carry, some difference of opinion exists. Hurst says that for dwellings V/^ cwt, public buildings % ewt. and ware- houses and factories 2% cwt. are safe calculations. Others assert that for domestic buildings 1 cwt. per foot would be ample for all contingencies. An American authority states 40 lbs. is sufficient for ordinary pur- poses. The following table shows the results of tests HOW TO USE THEM 431 of slab floors made without iron. The slabs were sup- ported all round, and uniformly loaded with bricks. Test of Slab Flooes. No. Length between Sup- ports, feet. Breadth between Sup- ports, feet. Thick- ness, feet. Age in Days. Breaking Weight, in cwt. per sq. ft. Weight of Slab, in cwt. per sq. ft. Total Breaking Weight, in cwt. per sq. ft. 1 14.5 6.75 .5 7 3. .54 3.54 2 (( 14 2.76 3.30 3 21 8.88 9.42 4 13.5 7 1.07 1.61 5 6.75 14 2.51 3.05 6 (( 21 2.84 3.38 Cast Concrete. — Innumerable patents have been ob- ^ tained for a combination of materials, also moulds for the construction of artificial stone. Among the many that may be mentioned is Mr. Ranger's system. He obtained a patent in 1832 for artificial stone formed with a lime concrete. The aggregate consisted of shingle, broken flints, mason's chippings, &c. The in- ventor stated that the best results were obtained by using 30 lbs. of an aggregate of a siliceous or other hard nature, 3 lbs. powdered lime, and 18 ozs. boiling water. No more of the materials were gauged at the time than were sufficient to fill one mould, as the boil- ing water caused the concrete to set very rapidly. This material, after fifty years' exposure is still sound and shows no sign of decay. No artificial stone equals, far less excels, the strength and durability, sharpness, and evenness of Portland cement concrete. This form of artificial stone is now extensively used as a substitute 432 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES for natural stone, for window heads, string courses, sills, columns, copings, keystones, and many other archi- tectural, constructive, and decorative features. Fig- ures, animals, bas-reliefs, capitals, panels, can be made in fine concrete with all the relief, undercut, and fine detail which distinguishes high-class from inferior work. Cast work has the advantage over in situ work that any defect can be detected previous to fixing. The methods of moulding and casting various works are given in the following pages. Concrete Dressings. — Architectural works, especially large or plain parts, are generally cast in wood moulds. If there are ornamental parts in the blocks, a combina- tion of wood and plaster, and sometimes gelatine, is used for the moulds ; wood for the main or plain parts, plaster for circular or moulded parts, and gelatine foi undercut parts. The plaster or gelatine, as the case may be, is screwed on or let into rebated parts of the wood. Ornamental parts are sometimes cast separately, and then fixed on the main cast. They may also be cast separately and laid into the main mould (face inwards), and the whole is cast together in a somewhat similar way to that described for "bedded enrich- ments" in fibrous plaster cornices. Considerable skill and ingenuity has been displayed in the construction of wood moulds for casting concrete blocks for architectural purposes. Many methods have been employed for fixing the sides and ends together, and also to the bottom of the mould, leaving one or more parts unfixed to facilitate the release of the east. The primitive method is to fix the various parts of the mould with screws. This is a slow and unreliable process, as the continual screwing and unscrewing for HOW TO USE THEM 433 each cast soon wears the screw-holes, and the sides be- come loose and out of square, causing the easts to get out of their true form. Hinges, also hooks and eyes, haye been used for the same purpose, but they are liable to the same defects as the screws when subject to long use. -Wedge MotrtD for Casting Blocks, Mouldbo Lintels, &c. NO. 27. Thumbscrews to fit into iron sockets are also used, but they are too expensive for ordinary work, and are unsuitable for small moulds. One of the most simple and reliable methods is the "wedge mould," invented by an architect. It is easily made, and expeditious in working. Even after long and constant use, the casts are alwaj'-s accurate in form and size. The wedges and the rebated ends allow the various parts to be correct- ly fixed and held in position. Illustration No. 27 shows the method of construction. The various parts are 434 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES named, and the sketch is self-explanatory. "When the moulds are extra deep, it is necessary to make two or more sets of tenons and wedges at each angle. When there are a large number of casts required the mould ends are strengthened by binding the projecting ends with hoop iron. This method has been adopted for casting a lot of blocks. Illustration No. 28 shows two useful kinds of moulds. Fig. 1 is a simple form of mould adapted for plain blocks, caps, lintels, &c. A, A, are the sides, which are grooved into the ends B, B, and Fig. I. Fig. 2. NO. 28. held together by the bolts and nuts, C, C, two on each side. The bolts may be about % inch diameter, with a good-sized square-head at one end, and a washer and nut at the other. This, having no bottom, is termed a bolted frame mould. It should be laid on a bench or moulding board before the cast is filled in. Fig. 2 is a section of a combined wood and plaster mould on the wedge principle,- adapted for casting a strong course moulding. A "is a moulding board, 1^2 inches thick, formed with two or more boards; a is one of two or more cross ledges, 1 inch thick, on which A, the ground, is nailed. B is a width board, 1 inch thick, which is HOW TO USB THEM 435 nailed on t6 A. This gives a point of resistance to the plaster piece G and the side board G. D is a side board on which E is screwed. E forms the sloping part of the weatheHng. P is one of two or more vertical - wedges which hold D E in position. The sockets for •the wedges P are made between the cross ledges, so that the wedge will project below the ground A. This allows the wedges to be more easily driven out when the cast is set. G is the back or plain side board. H is a fillet, 1% inches square, screwed on to the ground A. I and J are two folding wedges, or, in other words, wedges driven in opposite directions. These hold G in position. Two or more of these folding wedges are required, according to the length of the mould. The same remarks apply to the vertical wedges P. The lat- ter form of wedge is only given as an alternative. The end pieces are held in position by dropping them into grooves in a similar way as shown in the previous fig- ure, with the exception that the grooves are cut in the sides instead of the ends. K is a gauge rule which is used for ruling the upper surface of the cast fair. This may also be done by working a straight-edge longi- tudinally. The dotted line at L, the concrete, indicates the wall line. The level part of the weathering up to this line, or if splayed from the outer member of this line, must be finished smooth to allow the water to run freely off. When the cast is set, the wedges are with- drawn, and the sides and ends released. The cast is then turned over on its back end or top side on a board, and then the plaster piece and the wood ground is taken off. If the cast is green, it should be turned over on old sacks or wet sawdust, so as to. protect the arrises, and avoid fractures. 436 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES Illustration No. 29 shows a method commonly adopted for constructing moulds for sills and copings. Fig. 1 is the section of a mould for a window sill. A is the moulding board, made with two or more pieces, each 1% inches thick; a is one of two or more cross ledges, made with 1 inch stuff, on which A is nailed. B is the width board, made of % inch stuff, nailed on to A. C is a block, ll^ inches thick, which is nailed on to B. These blocks are placed about a foot apart, or so that they will carry the lining D, 1 inch thick. A Fig: ». Fig; 2. Fig. I.— Section ok Moulij for Casting Sii.i.s. Fig. 2.— Section of Moui.I)_for Casting Coping. NO. 29. groove or an iron tongue E is made in B, and a piece of thick hoop iron or iron bar is placed loosely in the groove before the cast is filled in. F is a fixed side, 11/4 inches thick. G is a fillet, 11/2 inches square, nailed on to F, and screwed on to moulding board A. H is a loose side, 1^4 inches thick', on -which the fillet I is nailed. J is one of two or more clips, which turn on a screw, and are used to hold the loose side H in posi- tion. These clips are made and used in the same way as described for fibrous slabs. As compared with wedges, clips are always in position ready for use, are HOW TO USE THEM 437 not liable to be mislaid, and when the fillets are fixed on to the side pieces, the clips keep the sides from rising as well as expanding. K is a throating or water groove, which is formed in the concrete L, with a rule having a rounded edge. Two blocks, dished at the inner ends, must be fixed one at each end of the mould, so as to form a stool or bed for the superstructure. The position and form of the groove is obtained from sink- ings cut in the end pieces of the mould. The end pieces are held in position by grooves cut in the side pieces in a similar way, as already described, with the excep- tion that the grooves are cu,t in the side pieces, instead of the end pieces. When setting out the mould, an extra length must be allowed for the side pieces for the grooves. A part of the upper surface of the cast (be- ing the part which projects beyond the line of wall) must be finished fair by hand at the same time as form- ing the water groove. This must be done while the cast is green. When the cast is released from the mould, the iron tongue will be found firmly embedded in the concrete. Pig. 2 is a section of a wood mould adapted for casting wall copings. A is the ground of a mould- ing board, which may be made of 1^-inch stuff, and in 2 or more widths ; a is one of two or more cross ledges, 1 inch thick, on which A is fixed. B, B, are blocks about 1^4 inches thick, placed about 1 foot apart. C, C, are linings, 1 inch thick, nailed to B, B. D is a fixed side, I14 inches thick. E is a fillet, 1% inches square, fixed to D, and then screwed on to A. P is a loose side, 11/4 inches thick, on which is nailed the fillet G, 1% inches square. This strengthens the sides and affords the fixing point for the clip H. The water grooves I, I, and the hollowed part in the middle of the 438 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES concrete J (made to save materials in weight) are worked from the end pieces of the mould, which are let into the grooves, as described in the previous diagram. If the moulds are deep, wood or iron clamps may be fixed across the sides to keep them in position, as shown by K. The moulding boards in this and the previous figures, if strongly made, can be used for a variety of similar purposes. "When introducing cast instead of run mouMed work, I used iron and zinc plates to strengthen and make more durable plain surfaces on wood moulds ; but owing to the expense and trouble in fixing the plates to the woodwork, they were aban- doned, and by using a better class of wood, and in- durating the surface of the mould with hot paraffin wax, sharp and clean casts were mbre cheaply pro- duced. Cast-iron moulds may be used where there is a large number of casts required. They may also be advantageously used for stock designs, such as plain moulded balusters. Wood moulds are rendered more durable and impervious to wet by brushing them with hot paraffin wax, and then forcing it into the wood by ironing with a hot iron. The use of paraffin wax and oil has already been described. Mouldings Cast "In Situ." — Casting cornices, cop- ings, &e., in situ is now frequently employed for con- crete. The advantages of this system over shop cast work, are, that the work is readily done, and the cart- age or moving from the workshops to the building, and the fixing, are dispensed with. Illustration No. 30 shows the method of constructing and fixing various kinds of casting moulds for in situ work. Fig. ] shows the section of a cornice, casting mould, HOW TO USE THEM 439 440 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES and supporting bracket. Wood moulds are generally used for small or plain mouldings, but where the profile is undercut or of an intricate nature, a plaster mould is preferable, as it is easier and cheaper to construct a plaster mould than cut the irons which are necessary for a wood mould for a special design. Fibrous plaster moulds may be used for this class of .work, but to illus- trate another method a combined wood and plaster mould is given. M is a moulding board to strengthen the plaster profile, and on which it is run. The board may be made in two or more pieces, each about 1 inch thick, and in width according to the depth of the mould- ing, and in length as required, the whole being held together by cleats H, which are nailed about 3 or 4 feet apart. Broad-headed nails are then driven in at ran- dom, leaving the heads projecting, to give a key for the plaster profile P. The profile is then run with a reverse running mould. It will be seen that this profile is undercut, therefore a loose piece L is required to enable the mould to draw off the moulding. The re- verse mould and loose piece are constructed in the same way as described under the heading of "Reverse Mould- ings." It may be here remarked that it is sometimes useful to have an "eye" inserted in the loose piece to' give a better hold for the fingers when taking the loose piece off the moulding. The eyes are made by twisting a piece of strong" wire round the handle of a tool brucli, leaving one end in the form of a ring, and the other bent outwards so as to form a key. The eyes are fixed about 3 or 4 feet apart, the fixing being done by cut- ting a hole in the loose piece and bedding the shank of the eye with plaster, and then cutting a slot in the main part of the mould to receive the ring of the eye HOW TO USE THEM 441 as shown at E. The mould is held in position by the bracket B, fixed 4 or 5 feet apart. The mould is further secured by the stay S, the other or inner end of the stay is fixed on to the main wall. It will be understood that a plaster mould for this purpose should be dry and hard, and then well seasoned with linseed oil, or with a hot solution of paraffin wax. After the mould is fixed in position it is oiled, and then the concrete C is filled in, taking care that the surface of the mould is first covered with a thin coat of neat cement. The mould may be oiled with paraffin oil; but if the mould is in- clined to "stick," oil it with "chalk oil," i. e., paraffin oil and French chalk, about the consistency of cream. When the concrete is set, the brackets are removed, and the mould taken off. The mould in this case would draw in the line of the arrow A. The loose piece is then taken off. It is here that the use of the eyes will be found. Before removing the brackets it is advisable to prop the mould, in case"" it may drop off and break the fragile portions of the mould or parts of the cornice. A heavy mould hanging in this position, especially if the profile is flat, or in good working order, is apt to drop, hence the necessity of props. If the mould clings, or, as more generally called, "sticks fast," gentle tap- ping with a heavy hammer will ease or spring it, and allow it to be taken off. A heavy hammer is more ef- fective in making the mould spring than a light ham- mer, as the force required for a light hammer is apt to injure the mould. This is why a heavy hammer with a flat head is best for plaster piece moulding. Fig. 2 is the section of a string moulding with the casting mould and bracket. A chase is formed in the brickwork to allow it to bond, and the joints and the 442 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES surface of the brickwork are cut out and hacked to give a further key to the moulding. M is the mould (in this case made of wood). The profile is drawn without any undercut parts, so as to allow the mould to draw off in one piece. B is the bracket, and C is the concrete. The same directions for casting Fig. 1 apply to this and the other moulding here shown. A drip member, as shown at the top member of both cornices, is generally used for exterior mouldings, to prevent the water run- ning over the wall surface. Fig. 3 is the section of a wall coping and the easting mould. M is the mould, a similar one being used for the other side. A mould for this purpose is best formed with flooring boards about 1 inch thick, and fixing them together as shown. The drip D is readily formed by sawing an inch bead through the centre, and nailing it on the bottom. Two forms of brackets, B and B, are here given. One is cut out of the solid, and the other made of two pieces of wood nailed together. Fig. 4 is the section of a casting mould for a saddle- back coping. R is a quarter-round piece of wood fixed in the angle of the mould to form a cavetto, which is sometimes used in copings. D is an angular-shaped drip, sometimes used in place of a circular one. T is part of a template used for forming the saddle-back of the coping. Fig. 5 is the section of a mould for a coping with splayed or chamfered angles. S is a triangular strip of wood fixed in the angle and the top of the mould to form the splays, and D is a circular drip. Concrete mouldings that are deeply undercut or in- tricate in profile may be cast in situ by the use of the "Waste Mould Process." HOW TO USE THEM 443 Modelling in Fine Concrete. — Fibres of tlie human and animal form, also emblems, trade signs, and build- ings, are now being made in fine concrete. The work may be executed in situ, or in the moulding shop, and then fixed in position. ~ For important works a plaster model is first made, and placed in position, so as to judge of the effect before committing it to the perma- nent material. For this purpose the model is first modelled in clay, and then it is waste-moulded, and a plaster cast obtained. After the model is approved it is moulded, and then cast in the fine concrete. The material is composed of Portland cement, and a light, but strong, aggregate ; and the cast is made in a similar way to that described for easting vases. The material may be colored as required to suit the subject. The general method of executing figures "on the round" in fine concrete or Portland cement is to model the figure direct in the cement on an iron frame, and then to fix it in its permanent position. This is effected by first making a full-sized sketch of the proposed figure, then setting out on this the form of the necessary iron- work to serve as frame or skeleton to form an internal support. This iron frame also forms a core to enable the figure to be made hollow, and serves as a permanent support for thin parts and extremities of the figure. The quantity, size, and form of the iron frame is regu- lated by the size, form, and position of the figure. For instance, if the model of a full-size lion is required, first make a rectangular frame to suit the feet of the lion and the base on which the figure stands. The base frame is made of iron bars, l^/^ inches wide by i/4 inch thick, fixed on edge. Then set out four leg-irons, and connect them on the base frame, and then set out one 444 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES or two body-irons, and connect them with the leg-irons. After this set out a looped piece to fit the contour of the neck and head, and fix it to the body-iron. Now set out the tail-iron. This is best formed with an iron pipe, and it should be made to screw on to the body- iron. This allows the tail to be unscrewed when the model is finished, and screwed on after the model is fixed in position, thus enabling the model to be more freely handled, and with less risk of breakage when moving and fixing in its permanent position. Having made the frame, place it on a stout modelling board, keeping the base frame from 1 to 3 inches above the board, according to the depth of the base ; the frame being temporarily supported with four pieces of brick or stone. This is done to allow the base frame to be enveloped with concrete. This done, fix wood rules, cut to the depth of the base, on the board, so as to form a fence on all sides of the base. Then fill in the base with concrete; and when this is set, proceed with the coring out, so as to obtain a hollow model. In order to decrease the weight of concrete figures "on the round," and to enable them to be more easily handled and hoisted when fixing them in their perma- nent positions, they should be made hollow. This "is effected by making a round skeleton frame with hoop- iron, or with wire-netting, for the body, neck, and head, and other thick parts. This metal skeleton must be built on and securely fixed to the main iron frame. The whole, or parts of the figure, may also be cored out with shavings or tow, and held in position with tar bands or canvas strips, dipped in plaster. Tow is an excellent material for forming cores. By making up the inner parts with dry tow, and then dipping tow in plaster for HOW TO USE THEM 445 the outside coat, the core can be made to any desired shape, and also leave the necessary thickness for the concrete. To prevent the material slipping down by its own weight, pieces of iron or wood, in the form of crosses, are fastened with copper wire or tar rope to the iron rods, which are used as single supports. These iron or wood pieces must be fixed in all directions, and in such a way that the material is held up by them. For small extremities, such as fingers of human figures, beaks of birds, fins of fishes, horns and tails of animals, iron rods should be fixed on the main frame, and the parts to be covered with cement must be notched or bound at intervals with copper wire or tar rope. The distance between the core and the finished face of the figure is of course the actual thickness of the model. This thickness may vary from 1 inch to 3 inches, or even 4 inches at some parts. An actual thickness of 2 inches will be sufficient to give the requisite strength. When the core is made, cover it with a coat of Port- land cement and old lime putty, in the proportion of 3 of the former to 1 of the latter, and add sufficient tow or hair to give tenacity. If there are open spaces in the skeleton iron work, bridge them over with bits of tiles and cement. The whole surface, after being coated, must be well scratched with a nail, to give a key for the roughing out coat. This scratched coat must be allowed to set before proceeding with the actual model- ling. The stuff for roughing out is composed of 2 parts of Portland cement and 1 part of fine aggregate. Crushed bricks, stone, or pottery ware passed through a sieve having a % inch mesh may be used as aggre- gates. The finishing stuff is composed of fine sifted Portland cement. The addition of a. fifth part of old 446 CEMENTS AND CONCKETES lime putty to the cement makes the stuff more mellow, and works freer and sweeter. The modelling is done as described for in situ work. The finishing coat can be colored to any desired tint, as already described. Concrete Fountainsji — Fine concrete is an excellent material for the construction of fountains. It is ob- vious that a vast amount of cutting and consequent waste of material is involved in the execating of foun- tains, ' ' on the round, ' ' when natural stone is employed. Saving of material, and a corresponding reduction in the cost, is effected by use of a material that can be easily cast, and is at the same time durable and im- pervious. These qualities combined are found in arti- ficial stone composed of fine concrete. Being readily made in large blocks (any sized basin can be made in one piece), there is no jointing required, as is the case with terra cotta, which is another form of artificial stone. Fountains composed of fine concrete are made in a similar way to that described for making and cast- ing vases. Concrete Tanks. — Concrete tanks to contain water, and for a variety of manufacturing purposes, ar'e now largely in use. They are strong and durable, and hav- ing hard smooth surfaces, they are easily washed and kept clean. Being impervious to vermin, damp, and atmospheric influences, they are the coolest and most sanitary water cisterns that can be used. Cattle troughs are best made in concrete. Concrete tanks have been used as water and silicate baths for indurating con- crete casts, and during their constant use for over a decade no signs of cracks or damp are visible. They were made in one piece, varying in size from 6 feet up to 18 feet long, 3 feet to 7 feet wide, 2 feet 6 inches to HOW TO USE THEM 447 feet high, and from 3 to 4l^ inches thick. Some were ast, but the large ones were made in situ. The method f construction (for in situ work) being simple and ex- editious, the total cost is small. For a tank 9 feet long, feet 6 inches wide, 2 feet 6 inches high, and 3% inches hick, first frame up wood sides and ends to the above Bngth, width, and height, then make inside boards, he lengths and widths being the same as above, less he tank thickness, and the heights less the bottom hickness. The sides and ends are hung by means of ross battens laid on the upper edges of the outside raming, and kept in position with inside stays. This ;aves an open and continuous space at the sides, ends, Qd bottom. The constructive materials are 1 part of ortland cement and 2 of fine slag or granite, gauged ;iff, and laid over the bottom. Next, the open sides ad ends are filled up, taking great care that the whole lass is thoroughly consolidated by ramming. The ;uff for the sides and ends should be laid in layers •om 6 to 8 inches deep, each layer being well rammed sfore the next is laid. The angles are strengthened by inserting angle irons aring the process of filling in. As soon as the concrete set the inner boards are removed, and if the surface smooth or dry, it must be keyed with a coarse drag ■ a sharp hand pick. It is then swept and wetted to eanse it and stop the suction, so as to ensure perfect •hesion, and allow the final coat to retain its moisture xring the process of trowelling and the stuff setting. The finishing coat is composed of neat cement, the ler ground the better, as percolation through con- ■ete made with a finely ground cement is less liable lan when made with a coarsely ground cement. 448 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES The final coat is laid about 3/16 inch thick, and pre- ceded by brushing the surface with liquid cement to fill up all crevices, and afford better adhesion between the surface and the final coat. When the stuff is firm, it is well trowelled to a fine and close surface. The outer boards are then removed, and the surface finished in a similar way. Concrete Sinks. — Concrete sinks can be made to any desired size or form. They are cast in wood or plaster moulds, and are composed of 1 part of Portland cement to 2 parts of fine crushed granite or other hard aggre- gate. They are made with rebated holes for traps. The ordinary size are as follows : 2 feet 6 inches by 1 foot 8 inches ; 2 feet 9 inches by 1 foot 8 inches ; and 3 feet by 2 feet, all 6 inches deep, and from 2 to 3 inches thick. Garden Edging. — Plain and ornamented edgings are now made in concrete. They are made in various lengths. The most useful size is 3 feet long, 6 inches deep, and 2 inches thick. They can be made to any curve, and tinted to any shade. Concrete Vases. — During the last half-century thou- sands of vases, composed of fine concrete — commonly called "artificial stone" — have been used for the dec- oration of buildings and practical use in gardens, con- servatories, &e. For vases that are cast in sections the thickness of large and open parts, such as the "body," are regulated by means of a plaster core, which is placed in the open mould. The contour of the core must be so arranged tjiat the cast will draw from the core, or vice versa. For some forms of vases, the core must be made in pieces similar to a piece mould. The method of making, moulding, and casting — the latter by the aid of a template instead of a core ilW VV l.\J UfOJJi XXJ.XJi.TJ. Concrete Mantel Pieces. — Chimney-pieces of all sizes and shapes- are now extensively made in fine concrete. They are generally made in wood moulds, plaster moulds being let in the main mould for ornamental parts. They are often made in colored concrete. Colored Concrete. — Concrete casts, also work laid in situ, can be colored to imitate any natural stone. This is effected by mixing mineral oxides of the required color with the cement used for the surface coat. The color coat should not exceed % inch in thickness, as oxides are too expensive to use for the entire thickness of the cast. The quantity of oxide to be added to the cement depends upon the strength of the oxide. Some are much stronger than others. Five per cent, of a strong oxide will impart a close resemblance of the desired color to the concrete, but a weak oxide will re- quire from 10 to 15 per cent., and even 20 per cent., to obtain the same color. Some of the red oxides range in color from scarlet or Turkey red, gradually deepen- ing to chocolate. Some oxides contain 95 per cent, of pure ferric oxide, which is made from copperas, or, scientifically speaking, sulphate of iron. This is a by- product, and is frequently evolved from waste acid liquors at tinplate works, and is obtained in large quan- tities from South Wales. This kind of oxide is far more suitable for coloring concrete than ochres and most of the earthy oxides. Earthy colors, like Venetian red and umber, soon fade and have a sickly appearance. The oxides should be intimately mixed with the cement in a dry state before it is gauged. The mixing is gen- erally done by hand, but better results are obtained by the use of grinding machine. It is a safe plan to try various proportions of color and cement and gauge 450 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES small parts, and when set and dry select those most suitable for the desired purpose. All cast work, as soon as extracted from the moulds, should be examined, and any blubs stopped and chipped parts or other minor defects made good while the work is moist or green, using neat cement and colors in the same proportion as used for the surface stuff. Colored surfaces may be greatly improved by brushing the cast as soon as set with a solution of the same color as used for the sur- face coat. A color solution, made by mixing the color with water and a solution of alum, is very useful for coloring Portland cement, with or without sand. If this coloring solution is brushed over the surface while it is moist or semi-dry, a good standing color can be ob- tained without mixing color with dry cement. This method will be found useful for sgraffitto, &c. A novel and color-saving method, for coloring the upper surfaces of slabs or other flat casts, is effected by first filling in the mould in the usual way, then placing the colored cement in a dry state in a hand sieve, and then violently shaking or tapping the sides of the sieve, so as to sprinkle the colored cement uni- formly over the surface until it is nearly 1/16 inch thick. The surface is then trowelled in the usual Avay. The sprinkling must be done as soon as the main body of the stuff is ruled off, so as to obtain a homogeneous body. Another and a novel method which may be ad- vantageously employed for finishing slab or other large surfaces in a mould is as follows : A fine finished face is more readilj^ obtained by using a smoothing knife (for brevity termed a "shaver") than by a trowel. A shaver is a piece of polished steel about 3 inches wide and % inch thick, the length being regulated according HOW TO USE THEM 451 to the width of the mould, and allowing about 8 inches at each end for handles. For instance, for a slab 2 feet wide, the shaver should be 3 feet long. This allows 2 feet for the surface of the cast, 3 inches to bear on the rims of the mould, each W2 inches wide ; 8 inches for the handles, each 4 inches long; and 1 inch for play. One edge or side is cut to an angle of 45°, so as to form a cutting edge. The method of filling in, coloring, and finishing the surface of the slab is as follows : First fill in the mould with the concrete, ramming and beat- ing it as already described until the stuff is about 1/16 inch above the mould rims, then clean off the stuff on the rims with a wood template (rebated to fit the width of the rims), and lay the shaver flat on the rims, keep- ing the cutting edge outwards, and then push it for- ward, keeping it flat on the rims, so as to shave off the superfluous stuff. This done, sprinkle the colored ce- ment, with the aid of a sieve, until about 1/16 inch thick; then clean the rims again, and pass the shaver forwards and backwards twice or thrice, which will leave a straight, smooth, and uniform-colored surface. This method effects a considerable saving in the amount of oxide and of time. The thickness of the coloring stratum is reduced mechanically to the minimum (about 1/32 inch), which is all sufficient for coloring purposes where the surface is not subjected to frictional wear. As already mentioned, bullocks' blood mixed with cement gives a near resemblance to red brick, but it is not a desirable material to work with, and the same effect can be obtained by the use of red oxides. Red sand, brick, and stone, all finely ground, have been em- ployed for coloring cement surfaces^ but if too fine or in large quantities they weaken the surface; and if 452 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES coarse-grained they possess little coloring effect, be- cause the particles are liable to show singly, causing a spotty appearance, or the cement entirely covers the surface of each particle of sand. Powdered glass, mar- ble, flint, alabaster, metal filings, and mineral coloring can be effectively employed for coloring concrete sur- faces by mixing with the cement used for the surface coat. The surface is improved by rubbing and stoning, also polishing, after the work is dry. Other methods and quantities of colors for coloring Portland cement surfaces are given. Fixing Blacks. — Concrete fixing blocks do not shrink, warp, or rot. Consequently they are superior to wood fillets,. &c. They are principally used in concrete floors, stair landings, and walls, as bearings and fixing points for wire-lathing and fibrous plaster work. Floor boards may also be fixed to them. They are also built into brick walls for similar purposes, as well as for external wall tilings. For ceilings, stair soffits, and landings, the blocks are laid on the centrings where required, and permanently secured by laying concrete between and over them. For bearings and fixing flooring boards, they are secured flush. TYPICAL SYSTEMS OF REINFORCED CONCRETE CONSTRUCTIONS FROM VARIOUS SOURCES. Of the interesting features of modern civil engineer- ing, interesting because of their extreme novelty and successful application, reinforced concrete is probably most noteworthy because of its unique adaptability. How striking is the influence of steel reinforcement is best exemplified by a reference to Fig. 1. There tw'j HOW TO USE THEM 453 beams are shown designed to carry ordinary floor loads, the one made entirely of concrete and the other of con- crete with a sheet of expanded metal imbedded in the tensile portion of the beam. The saving in mere weight of concrete alone is apparent; and when we remember that the adoption of floor beams entirely of concrete means an increase of thickness of nine inches or as- suming five to eight floors, an increase in the -total height of the buifding (with extra cost and heavier walls, together with heavier foundations to carry them) of from four to six feet, we see that even as regards initial outlay for materials, the introduction of settle reinforcement into concrete construction is of import- ance.t So far as economy in initial cost of materials is con- cerned, reinforced concrete is undoubtedly cheaper than either concrete or steel alone. It is not very easy to demonstrate this economy except by comparative cost in individual eases, but an approach to a systematic comparison has been made by, Mr. Walter Loring Webb, as follows:' A cubic foot of steel weighs 490 pounds. Assume as an average price that it can be bought and placed for 4.5 cents per pound. The steel will theref are cost $22.05 per cubic foot. On the basis that concrete may be placed for $6 per cubic yard, the concrete will cost 22 cents per cubic foot which is 1 per cent of the cost of the steel. Therefore, on this basis if it is neces- sary to use as reinforcement an amount of steel whose volume is in excess of 1 per cent of the additional con- crete which would do the same work, there is no econ- omy in the reinforcement, even though the reinforce- ment is justified on account of the other considerations. Assuming 500 pounds per square inch as the working 454 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES compressive strength of concrete, and 16,000 as the per- missible stress in steel, it requires 3.125 per cent of steel to furnish the same compressive stress as concrete. ' On the above basis of cost, the compression is evidently obtained much more cheaply in concrete than in steel — in fact, at less than one-third of the cost. On the other hand, even if we allow 50 pounds per square inch tension in the concrete and 16,000 pounds in the steel, it requires only 0.21 per cent of steel to furnish the Pig. l.-;^TIiese Beams Are Designed to Carry the iSame Load. Tlie Upper is of Reinforced Concrete, the Lower of Plain Concrete. same strength as the concrete, which shows that, no matter what may be the variation in the comparative " price, of concrete and steel, steel always furnishes ten- sion at a far cheaper price than concrete, on the above basis at less than one-third of the cost. The practical meaning of this is, on the one hand, that a beam com- posed wholly of concrete is usually inadvisable, since its low tensile strength makes it uneconomical, if not actu- ally impracticable, for it may be readily shown that, beyond a comparatively short span, a concrete beam will not support its own weight. On the other hand, HOW TO USE THEM 455 on account of the cheaper compressive stress furnished by concrete, an all-steel beam is not so economical as Fig. 2.— Types of Steel Reinforcing Rods. a beam in which the concrete furnishes the compres- sive stress and the steel furnishes the tensile stress. Fig. 3.— A Reinforced Concrete Pier for Railway Traffic. This statement has been very frequentl.y verified when comparing the cost of the construction of floors de- 456 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES signed by using steel I-beams supporting a fire-proof concrete floor, and that of a concrete floor having a similar floor slab but making the beams as T-beams of reinforced concrete. A good idea of reinforced concrete construction can be obtained from Fig. 3, which is an isometrical pro- jection of a portion of a pier strong enough to carry the heaviest railway traffic. The disposition of the steel work is shown in the piles, .the xakin girders, and beams; and the manner in which the steel rods run- ning along the tensile or bottom. side of the girders and beams are bent up over the top of the pile, which is here the tensile member (the beams being continu- ous), and then down again to the bottom of the girders and beams, is most instructive. Fig. 4.— Method of Joining Colnmns and Floors. The sections of the steel employed vary in different systems, being round, flat, square, angle, and tee — ^Fig. 2. In all eases the simplest section is the best, as it costs less, and readily allows the concrete to be rammed into the closest contact with the entire surface of the armoring. In America the Ransome system is most extensively used — a system in which a bar of twisted . HOW TO USE THEM 457 steel is employed. Small sections are better than large ones, for by their use we obtaiii a more uniform dis- tribution of stress in the steel; we can also readily bend and work them into aiiy required shape; and finally the most economical disposition of material is obtained, the metal being placed at the maximum dis- tance from the neutral axis. Fig. 5.— The Monier System. Expanded metal meshing (Fig. 6) is increasingly em- ployed, more particularly in the lighter forms of con- struction. It consists of sheets of metal which have been mechanically slit and expanded, so as to produce a network. This type of reinforcement has many and obvious advantages. Its mere existence is proof of good steel, and it forms an excellent key for concrete too thin to permit reinforcement in the form of rods ; thus it is very useful for concrete plaster, ceiling, and parti- tion wall work. A good example of reinforced con- crete in which expanded metal is used may be found in the Monier system (Pig. 5). An improvement on 458 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES 'this system is the Clinton method (Fig. 11) of using an electrically welded wire netting in combination with concrete. Clinton fabric consists of drawn wire of 6 to 10 gauge, which may be made in lengths up to 300 feet. The system is therefore a continuous bond system, which prevents the entire collapse of a span unless the weight imposed is sufficient to break all the wires. Pig. 67— Expanded Jlletal. Columns cmd Piles. — Reinforced columns are made with either square, rectangular, or circular sections. They are reinforced with from four to twenty rods, the diameters of which vary from % to 2% inches. The rods are placed as nearly as practicable to the circum- ference of the column, so as to give the greatest radius of gyration for the section ; but they are never placed so near the surface that they have not at least one or two inches protective covering. The steel so disposed is able to take up the tensile stresses which may be HOW TO USE TIIERI 459 iiulneoil in the colmiin by eceeutrie loading', lateral shock, ^viud pressure, and the pull of belting'. Columns and piles are made in wooden boxes, each consisting of three permanent sides and a fourth side which is temporary and removable. Under the patent rights of Francois Hennebique the reinforcing is placed JTig. 7. -Kajliiomti ^yiitem of £i'ectingr CuIumDS. in these boxes, and ad.iusted by gauges to within one or two inches of the sides. The concrete is laid and rammed, about six inches at a time, with small hand rammers. The open side of the box is built up by battens fitting into grooves in the permanent sides, as the work proceeds ; this enables inspection of the work 460 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES to be made, and facilitates the placing of the ties at the proper positions. The ties are made of round wire 3/16 Fig. 8.— Wood Centering and RanBome Steel Bars for 50-foot Floor Span. inch diameter and are" dropped down over the top of the steel rods. They are spaced down two-inch centres HOW TO USE THEM 461 at the bottom' a^d top, to twelve-inch centres in the centre of length of the column, and are intended to prevent the steel rods from spreading out under the action of longitudinal loads. Fig. 4 shows the method of joining eoliimns to the floor. Pig. 9.— Concrete Power Plant in Course of Construction. In the Ransome columns as exemplified in a recently constructed factory building (Fig. 7), the vertical re- inforcement consists of round rods with the connections made about 12 inches above the floor line ; in order that 462 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES these rods might be continuous the ends were threaded and connected with sleeve nuts, thereby developing the full strength of the rods. Horizontal reinforcement was also used, consisting of hoops formed by a spiral Fig. 10.— Slabs of Concrete keady for Boof. made from ^4: inch diameter soft wire, having a pitch or spacing of 4 inches in the basement columns, and gradually increasing to a pitch of 6 inches in the top story (Fig. 12). According to Mr. Henry Longcope the first innova- tion in concrete piles was the sand pile, produced by HO-W TO USE THEM 463 driving a wooden form in the ground and withdrawing it, the hole being filled with moist sand well rammed. The next method adopted was to drive a metal form into the ground and after withdrawal to fill the hole with concrete. This was not successful, as it was open to the serious objec- tion that on withdrawing the form, the ground would col- lapse before the concrete could be inserted. Still another method was introduced, which consisted in dropping a cone- shaped five ton weight a num- ber of times from a consider- able height, in order to form a hole, which was afterward filled with concrete. This method never passed the ex- perimental stage. Coming to more successful systems we may mention a method of moulding a pile of concrete, allowing it to stand, and then driving it into the ground, a cap being used . to protept the head. Of modern systems which have proven successful, Gil- breth's pile must first be re- 464 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES HOW TO USE THEM 465 corded. Gilbreth used a molded corrugated taper pile, cast with core hole the entire length of the pile, which is jetted down by a water jet and finally settled by hammer blows. Features which recommended the Gilbreth piles are the opportunities for complete inspection before driv- ing and the fact that they save time because they can be eased while excavation is going on. After being driven they can be loaded immediately. Naturally they present considerable skin friction. The making of these piles above the ground surface also does away with the possibility of their being damaged or squeezed out of shape by the jar occasioned by driving forms for ad- joining piles. Still another method is used by Raymond. Under this system piles are usually put in by either of two methods, the jetting method or the pile core method. The water jet system is used only where the material penetrated is sand, quicksand, or soft material that will dissolve and flow up inside the pile when the water is forced through the pipe, thus causing the shell to settle until it comes in contact with the next shell, and so on until the desired depth has been reached. The shells are filled with concrete simultaneously with the sinking process, and when "necessary spreads are attached to keep the hole in perfect line with the pipe. The y% inch pipe is left in the centre of the pile and gives it greatly increased lateral strength. If desired, the lateral strength may be further increased by inserting rods near the outer surface of the concrete. By this method, piles of any size up to two feet in diameter -at the bottom and fow feet at the top can be put through 466 CEMENTS AND CONCEETES any depth of water and to a suitable penetration in sand or silt (water sediment). The pile-core method is the one most -generally used for foimdation work and consists of a collapsible steel pile core, conical in shape, which is incased in a thin, tight-fitting metal shell. The core and shell are driven into the ground by means of a pile driver. The core is so constructed that when the desired depth has been reached it is collapsed and loses contact with the shell, so that it is easily withdrawn, leaving the shell or cas- ing in the ground, to act as a mold or form for the concrete. When the form is withdrawn, the shell or casing is filled with carefully mixed Portland cement concrete, which is thoroughly tamped during the filling process. The simplex system uses another method in which the driving form consists of a strong steel tube, the lower end of which is fitted with powerful tooth jaws, which close together tightly, with a point capable of opening automatically to the full diameter of the tube while being withdrawn. The point of the form closely resembles the jaws of an alligator. At the same time the form is being withdrawn, the concrete is deposited. It is so evident that concrete is vastly superior to wood in the construction of piles that it is almost su- perfluous to mention the points of superiority. Con- crete is not subject to rot or the ravages of the teredo worm, neither can the piles constructed of concrete be destroyed by fire, and no cost is attached for repairs. While it is not possible to give accurate statistics as to the life of a wooden pile, as it varies so much under different conditions, yet we know that in some cases a wooden pile is rendered worthless in a very few years, HOW TO USE THEM 467 especially when the surrounding material is composef) of rotted vegetation, or where the pile is exposed by the rise and fall of tides. It is also impossible to state the exact cost of a concrete pile, as it varies also ac- cording to conditions. Ordinarily speaking^ a concrete pile will cost from one and one-half times or two times as much as a wooden pile; but in order to illustrate where a saving can be made, the following extract is given from a report on the piles driven at the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Md. : "The original plans called for 3,200 wooden piles cut off below low water with a capping of concrete. To get down to the low water level required sheet pil- ing, shorting and pumping, and the excavating of near- ly 5,000 cubic yards of earth. By substituting concrete piles, the work was reduced to driving 850 concrete piles, excavating 1,000 cubic yards of earth and placing of 1,000 cubic yards of concrete." In the work mentioned, the first estimate for wooden piles placed the cost at $9.50 each, while the estimate for concrete piles was placed at $20 each, yet the esti- mate based on the use of wood piles aggregated $52,840, while the estimate based on the use of concrete piles was $25,403, or a total saving in favor of concrete of over $27,000. In several instances piles have been uncovered to their full depth, and they were found to be perfectly sound in every particular. By surrounding the opera- tion with the safeguards provided, it is almost impos- sible to make a faulty pile. The concrete is made as wet as good practice will allow. Constant ramming and dropping the concrete from a considerable height tend to the assurance of a solid mass, then the target on 468 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES the ramming line or the introduction of an electric light into the form shows what is being done at the bottom ' of the form. Floors, Slabs and Roofs. — The system of construction for floors, slabs, and roofs is determined by the extent of the work and the nature of the loads to be carried. If intended for small buildings and offices, the items can be made before erection (Figs. 9 and 10) ; but in the case of warehouses, factories, piers, and jetties, where live loads and vibrator stresses have to be borne, a monolithic structure is secured by building in molds directly on the site. For the lighter classes of mono- lithic structure, expanded metal is admirably suitable; it is also much used, for the roofs of reservoirs, and for thin partitipned walls. The meshing is simply laid over the ribs or floor beams, which have been already erected, and the green concrete is applied to the acquired thickness, being supported from below by suitable sup- porting work, which is removed as soon as the concrete has set. In cold storage factories, the floor beams and ceilings are invariably erected first, the floor being laid afterward. The ceiling is then solid with the floor beams on their under side, and the floor is solid with them on their upper side, the air space between being a great aid to the maintenance of a low temperature for refrigeration. In the Monier floors the reinforcement consists of round rods varying from ^ inch to % inch diameter. The rods are spaced at about six times their diameter, and are crossed at right angles, being connected by iron wire bound round them. This artificial method of securing the rods takes considerable time, and is thus a somewhat costly process. To produce continuity of HOW TO USE THEM 469 metal, the different lengths of rods are overlapped for about 8 to 16 inches, and bound with wire. The Schluter are similar to the Monier floors, but the rods are crossed diagonally, and the longitudinal rods are of the same size as the transverse ones. The Cottancin floors have their rods interlaced like the canes of a chair seat or a basket, and the Hyatt floors have square rods with holes through which small trans- verse rods pass. Over fifty systems of reinforcing are in use, and in most cases the only points of difference are the shape of the section and the method of attach- ment and adjustment. Beams. — It is obvious that, as the span increases, a limit will soon be reached beyond which it is not eco- nomical to use plain floor slabs, for their dead weight becomes of such magnitude as to prohibit their use. We have thus to resort to a division of the main span by cross beams resting on columns, and the floor is laid on these beams, which are arranged to take as much of the load as to render it possible to reduce the thick- ness of the floor within reasonable limits. Reinforced concrete beams are typical of the construction in which the merits of two component materials are made to serve a common end; but in the particular case of steel and concrete, the actual part played by the steel is not at all well understood. Speaking generally, beams do not differ in construc- tional details from floors. The same reinforcement is used in both, the only difference being, that as beams are usually deeper than floors, the shearing stresses be- come more pronounced, the greater provision has to be made for them by a liberal use of stirrups or vertical binding rods. In some systems the reinforcement con- 470 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES sists entirely of straight rods, disposed in any part of the beam where tensile stresses are likely to be called into play. In others, specially bent rods are joined or welded to straight rods, disposed and when welding has to be done it would appear that wrought iron is more suitable than steel. It is usual to arrange the dimensions of the beams so that the whole of the compressive stresses are taken by that portion of the concrete on one side of the neu- tral axis; but in some cases, as with continuous beams or heavy beams of small depth, a portion of the rein- forcement is disturbed along compressed portion of the beam, the steel rods either taking up the excess of compressive stress over that at which the concrete can be safely worked, or else taking up the tensile stresses at the places where they occur over the supports. As a general rule we may take it that the economical depth for a reinforced concrete beam, freely supported at both ends, is one-twentieth the span, and is thus ap- proximately the same as that of a steel girder of equal strength. Reinforced concrete beams are now made for spans up to 100 feet for buildings, and 150 feet for bridges. But for each class of work beyond this limit, the weight becomes excessive. Several arched ribs, for much greater spans havCj however, been sueaess- fully built. The beams are made in much the same way as piles and columns ; they can be made in sheds on the site, or in the actual position they are to occupy when fin- ished. The ceiling and beams are erected first, the floor being afterward worked on the top of the' beams. Wc thus obtain a very perfect monolithic structure in which any vibration set up by machinery, falling loads, HOW TO USE THEM 471 etc., will be of much less extent than with any ordinary type of building, in which there is often a great want of rigidity, the beams and arches being loose and able to vibrate independently of other parts of the struc- ture. Concrete being as weak in shear as in tension, pro- vision is also required to take the shearing stresses. -Some American designers have to this end patented special forms of reinforcement bar, in which each main tension bar has projecting upward from it ties inclined at the angle of 45 deg. (Kahn system.) These ex- tend to the top of the bar and take the tensile stresses arising from the shear. The corresponding compres- sive strjBss at right angles to this is carried by the con- crete. The system is efficient and on large spans, where weight must be reduced to a minimum, it has its ad- vantages. Thus, in the Ransome system (Fig. 12), the shearing stresses at the end of a beam are taken up by inclined reinforcing rods imbedded in the concrete at the junc- tion of beam with column. Arches. — Concrete has long had an extensive ap- plication in the building of arches, but until the in- troduction of reinforced concrete the arches that could be economically and safely constructed were limited to spans of a few feet. The general rule that the line of resistance fell within the middle third had to be ob- served for simple concrete arches, as for those in brick- work and masonry; and the thickness of the arches at the crown was thus approximately the same whether built in either of these materials. The introduction of steel reinforcement, however, made it possible not only to reduce the thickness of the ring of a given load;^ m CEMENTS ANt) CONCRETES HOW TO USE THEM carrying capacity, but by suitably providing for tne tensile stresses to enable arches of much greater span and smaller rise to be built. Some general types of arches in reinforced concrete are shown in Figs. 13, 14, 15 and 16. Fig. 13 shows an ordinary arch with top and bottom armature. In many ^cases where the ten- sile stresses can safely be carried by the concrete the top armature can be omitted. In the Melane arches, shown in Fig. 14, the top and bottom armatures are connected by ligatures, and in the Hennebique arches (Fig. 15) stirrups are used. As a general rule, hinges should be built at the stringings and the crown, for the calculations are much simplified, and the line of re- sistance goes through the hinges; the arches also ad- just themselves better to the load and to any slow temperature changes, and when the centering is struck the arch can better take its bearings without cracking. The methods of calculations for arches are as numer- ous as those for beams, and generally speaking are as irrational. The Monier system is the one most gen- erally adopted, and over 400 bridges built on this sys- tem now exist in Europe. In America expanded metal and Clinton electrically-welded fabric are often used. An example of the latter construction will be found in Fig. 17. SpME MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. Lintels. — Concrete lintels and beams are fast super- seding those made of stone and wood. Lintels are generally cast and then fixed. t74 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES A Sciriil Staircase buift on the Henoeblqne prhicfple. HOW TO USB THEM 475 Concrete Walls. — Many ingenious plans have been introduced as substitutes for wood framing for retain- ing concrete while constructing walls and partitions. The most simple method is as follows : Cast a number of concrete angle slabs with an L section, and then place them level in contrary directions, thus [ [, spaced to the width of the proposed partition or wall until the desired length of wall is completed, and fill the openings with 'rough concrete. When set, place another row on this (taking care to break the joints by overlapping), and so on, until the desired height is obtained. Concrete for walls formed in situ should be deposited in layers, taking care that each layer is thor- oughly rammed and keyed, as described under the heading of "Ramming." A suitable finish for ordi- nary purposes, for rough walls built in situ, may be obtained by "rough trowelling." This is done by first gauging 1 part of Portland cement, 1 part of old lime putty, and 2 parts of sand. The adding of lime renders the stuff more plastic and easy to work, with- out decreasing the impermeability of the work. This "limed cement" is applied with a hand-float, and is thoroughly worked into the crevices of the concrete, but leaving no body on the surface. The surface is then finished by brushing with a wet stock-brush. The walls should be well wetted before the stuff is applied. Strong Booms. — Concrete is frequently employed in the construction of strong-rooms that are situated underground, and are rendered damp-proof as well as burglar-proof, which is useful for the storage of docu- ments. Concrete Coffins and Cementatimi.— The great im- provements in the manufacture of Portland cement 476 CEMENTS AND CONCKETES during the last decade has so cheapened and improved the quality as to bring it more and more to the front as one of the most useful and important materials for a variety of purposes. One of the latest uses found for it is in the construction of coffins, by the author, whose invented and registered idea was that such a cofSn, made of specially prepared metallic concrete, would be impermeable, and practically indestructible, and that it would obviate the danger of spreading the poisons of disease by preventing the escape of noxious gases. The lid having a strong piece of plate glass embedded in the concrete, and directly over the face, enabled the mourners to see the features of the depart- ed. The edge of the open cofSn had a sunk groove, and the lid a corresponding projection, only smaller, to allow for a coat of fine cement. "When the joints were bedded and pressed together until the excess ce- ment oozed out, the coffin was hermetically sealed. The coffin should be left uncovered by cement for identification, and so that friends could view it until the time of removal to the cemetery. The face could then be covered with quick-setting cement, which, join- ing with the other portion of "cement, would perma- nently embalm the body, which would further be pro- tected by fixing the lid in a similar way. If the prop- erties of this class of coffin are taken into considera- tion, the expense will be comparatively less than that of wood. If expense is not a speci-al consideration, the coffin can be enriched with armorial bearings or other devices. The concrete may also be polished like real granite. One objection was raised as to the weight, but the old stone coffins and those of oak lined with lead were also heavy. Besides, the weight would b« HOW TO USE THEM 477 a protection against body-snatchers, and bearing in mind that a coffin is only moved about once in a life- time, or rather at death, the question of weight is un- important. Cementation, from a sanitary point of view, would be equal if not superior to cremation. In ease of an epidemic, the coffins could be cemented at once, and stacked in the cemetery until graves or vaults were prepared for them. It may be safely said that it is a clean, safe, effectual, rapid and sanitary method of disposing of the dead. If their manufacture should not cause any great amount of extra employment for plasterers, the latter can at least make their own cof- fins, in frosty weather, when most works are stopped, and they could use them as baths during their life- time. Stonette. — Stonette is a composition of Portland ce- ment and fine aggregate, to imitate any kind of stone, and so made that it can be carved the same as natural stone. The Portland cement must be thoroughly air- slaked, finely sifted, and gauged with the natural ag- gregate in the proportion of 2 of cement to 7 of ag- gregate. The aggregate is composed of finely crushed natural stone, the same as that to be imitated. This should be passed through a fine sieve. It is necessary, when imitating some stones, to add a small portion of oxide to counteract the color of the cement. If a very white stone is being imitated, the addition of a small proportion of whiting or French chalk or well-slaked white limestone, is necessary to obtain the desired color. The material should be gauged stiff, and then well rammed into the mould. The carving is best done while the cast blocks are green. Tile Fixing. — Tile fixing is in some places a sepa- 478 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES rate branch of the building trade, but it is generally recruited from the ranks of plasterers, and in some districts it is done by plasterers. As regards the pro- cess of placing the tiles, it is be^t to work from the centre of the space, and if the design be intricate, to lay out a portion of the pavement according to the plan, upon a smooth floor, fitting the tiles together as they are to be laid. Lines being stretched over the foundation at right angles, the fixing may proceed, both the tiles and the foundation being previously soaked in cold water, to prevent the too rapid dry- ing of the cement, and to secure better adhesion. The border should be left until the last. Its position and that of the tiles are to be obtained from the drawing, or by measuring the tiles when laid loosely upon the floor. The cement for fixing should be mixed thin, in small quantities, and without sand. It is best to float the tiles to their places, so as to exclude air, and fill the spaces between them and the foundation. For fix- ing tiles in grate cheeks, sides and backs of fire-places, etc., equal parts of sand, plaster and hair mortar may be used. These materials are sometimes mixed with hot glue to the consistency of mortar. The tiles should be well soaked in warm water. Keen's or other white cement's are used as fixing materials for wall tiles, neat Portland cement (very often killed) being generally used for floor work. Tiles may be cut in the follow- ing manner : Draw a line with a pencil or sharp point where the break is desired, then placing the tile on a form board, or embedding it in sand on a flagstone, tap it moderately with a sharp chisel and a hammer along the line, up and down, or scratch it with a file. The tile may then be broken in the hand by a gentlr HOW TO USE THEM 479 blow at the back. The edg-es, if required, may be smoothed by grinding or by rubbing with sand and water on a flat stone. Tiles may also be sawn to any desired size. Cement should not be allowed to harden upon the surface of the tile if it can be prevented, as it is difficult to remove it after it has set. Stains or dirt adhering to tiles may be removed by wetting with diluted muriatic acid ("spirits of salts"), care being taken that the acid is all wiped off, and, after wash- ing, the superfluous moisture must be wiped off with a clean, dry cloth. In order to obtain a sound and straight foundation, which is imperative for good per- manent tile flxing, the substratum, whether on walls or floors, should be composed of Portland cement gauged with strong sand or similar aggregate in proportion of 1 of the former to 3 of the latter. The surface must be ruled fair and left rough, so as to form a fair bed and key for the fixing materials and tiles. Setting Floor and Wall Tile. — As this work properly belongs to the plasterer, where no regular tile setter is available, I have thought it proper to publish the fol- lowing instructions for doing this work, which are taken from a treatise prepared for the Tile Manufac- turers of the United States. This treatise, in pamphlet form, was intendedfor distribution among buyers and workers in tiles, and the directions and suggestions laid down in it are of the best, and quite suited to the wants of the workingmen: Foundations. — -A good foundation is always neces- sary, and should be both solid and perfectly level. Tile should always be laid upon concrete foundation, pre- pared from the best quality of Portland cement and clean, sharp sand and gravel, or other hard material. 480 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES (Cinders should never be used, as they have a iendenc% to destroy the life of the cement and cause it to dis integrate.) A foundation, however, may also be formec of brick or hollow tile embedded solidly in and eoverec with cement mortar. Concrete should be allowed tc thoroughly harden before laying the floor, and should be well soaked with water before laying the tile. Lime mortar should never be mixed with concreting. Concrete should consist of one part Portland cement two parts clean sharp sand, two parts clean gravel and thoroughly mixed with sufficient water to form a hard, solid mass when well beaten down into a bed, which should be from 2% inches to 3 inches thick. IJ the concrete bed can be made over three inches in thickness, the concrete can then be made of one part Louisville cement, one part clean sharp sand, one part clean gravel .and thoroughly mixed with sufficient wa- ter, as above described. For Floors. — The surface of the concrete must be level and finished to within one (1) inch of the fin- ished floor line, when tile ^^ inch thick is used, which will leave a space of ^2 inch for cement mortar, com- posed of equal parts of the very best quality Portland cement and clean sharp sand. The distance below the surface of the finished floor line, however, should be governed by the thickness of the tile. For Wood Floors. — When tiles are to be laid on wood flooring in new buildings the joists should be set Ive inches below the intended finished floor line and spaced about 12 inches apart and thoroughly bridged, so as to make a stiff floor, and covered with one-inch boards not over six inches wide (boards three inches wide preferred), and thoroughly nailed, and the joints % HOW TO USB THEM 481 inch apart to allow for swelling. (See No. 31.) (A layer of heavy tar paper on top of wood flooring will protect the boards from the moisture of the concrete, and will also prevent any moisture from dripping through to a ceiling below.) Figr. 31. In Old Buildmgs. — Cleats are nailed to joists five inches below the intended finished floor line, and short pieces of boards % inch apart fitted in between the Pig. joists upon the cleats and well nailed, and the joists thoroughly bridged. The corners on the upper edge of the joists should be chamfered off to a sharp point (see Fig. 32), as the flat surface of the joists will give an uneven foundation. When the strength of the joists will permit, it is best to cut an inch or more off 482 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES the top. (Where joists are too weak, strengthen by thoroughly nailing cleats six inches wide full length of joists.) When the solid wood foundation is thus prepared, concrete is placed upon it as above directed. Where Steel Beams and hollow tile arches are used, frequently very little space is left for preparing a proper foundation for setting" tile, as the rough coating is usually put in by the hollow tile contractor to pro- tect his work, but this covering should always conform \\: Pig. 33. to the requirements for a solid tile foundation. Should this not be the case, the tile contractor should remove sufficient of the covering to allow him to put down a foundation that will insure a satisfactory tile floor. (Cinders, lime, mortar or inferior material must never be used.) The tops of iron teams should he from three to four inches below che finished floor line, to prevent floors, when finished, showing lines of the beams. For Hearths. — The foundation for hearths should be placed upon a brick arch, if possible, to ensure perfect fire protection, and then covered with concrete in the same manner as directed for tile floors. If placed upon a sub-foundation of^wood, the concreting should be at least six inches thick. (See Pigs. 34 and 35.) HOW TO USE THEM 483 BOHRD-FLeoR BRICK WALL -30ISt W//M///,,y^^Am^A////Myy/M^//Wy'/;'/y/M. Fig-. 34. Fig. 35. 484 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES For Walls. — ^When tiles are to be laid on old brick walls the plaster must be all removed and the mortar raked out of the joints of the brick work to form a key for the cement. On new brick walls the points should not be pointed. When tiles are to be placed on stud- ding, "the studding should be well braced by filling in between the studding with brick set in mortar to the height of tile work (see Fig. 36) ; or brick work may be omitted and extra studding put in and thoroughly STI/DOrNC Pig. 36. bridged, so as to have as little spring as possible, and this studding then covered with sheet metal lathing. (See Fig. 37.) {Tile must never he placed on wood lath or on old plaster.) The brick walls must be well wet with water and then covered with a rough coating of cement mortar, composed of one part Portland ce- HOW TO USE THEM 485 ment and two parts clean sharp sand. When tiles are placed on metal lathing, hair should be mixed with the cement mortar to make it adhere more closely to the lath. The cement mortar should be % inch thick, or sufficient to make an even and true surface to within one (1) inch of the intended finished surface of the tile, when tile % inch thick is used, which will allow —STUDSIHG Fig. 37. a -space of ^2 ineli for the cement mortar, composed as above for rough coating the walls. The face of the cement foundation should be roughly scratched and allowed to harden for at least one day before com- mencing to lay the tile. If any lime is mixed with the cement mortar for setting the tileSj it should never exceed 10 per cent., and great care must be used to have the lime well slaked, and made free from fill 486 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES lumps by running through a coarse sieve, in order to guard against "heaving" or "swelling," and thus loosening or "lifting" the tiles. Important. — The foundation for both floor £lnd wall tiling should be thoroughly brushed, to remove all dust and small particles adhering to it, and then well wet before putting on the cement mortar. To ensure a perfect bond it is best to coat the foundation by brush- ing over it pure cement mixed in water. Cement. — The very best quality of Portland cement should always be used for setting either floor or wall tile and for grouting the floors, and the very best quality of Keene's Imported Cement for filling the joints in the wall tiling. Sand. — Clfean, sharp grit sand, free from all salt, loam or other matter, and perfectly screened before mixing with the cement, should always be used. Mortar. — ^For floors or vitreous tiles, should be com- posed of equal parts of cement and sand, and for wall tiles one (1) part of cement and two (2) parts sand. The mortar should not be too wet, but should be rather stiff, and should always be used fresh, as mortar, when allowed to set before using, loses a portion of its strength. Soaking. — Tiles must always be thoroughly soaked in water before setting, which makes the cement unite to the tiles. The Tiles for the Floors are first laid out to ascer- tain if they are all right and compared with the plan provided for laying the floors. Strips are then set, beginning at one end of and in the centre of the room, and level with the intended finished floor line. Two sets of guide strips running parallel about 18 to 30 HOW TO USE THEM 487 inches apart should be set first. (See Pig. 38.) The mortar is then spread between them for about six to ten feet at a time, and level with a screed notched at each end, to allow for the thickness of the tiles. The ■tiles are placed upon the mortar, which must be stiff enough to prevent the mortar from working up be- -^' v'V— .-"''v v'^'*^. v'V Pig. 38. tween the joints. The tiles are to be firmly pressed into the mortar and tamped down with a block and hammer until they are exactly level with the strips. When the space between the strips is completed, the strips on one side of the tile is moved out 18 to 30 inches and placed in proper position for laying an- other section of tile, using the tiles which have been 488 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES laid for one end of the screed, and the laying of the tile continued in the same manner until the floor is finished. When the cement is sufficiently set, which should be in about two days, the floor should be well scrubbed with clean water and a broom, and the joints thoroughly grouted with pure cement (mixed with water to the consistency of cream). As soon as this begins to stiffen, it must be carefully rubbed off with sawdust or fine shavings and the floor left perfectly clean. Ceramics. — I'he foundation and cement mortar for ceramics are the same as for plain or vitreous floors, and the guide strips used in the same manner. The cement mortar is th6n spread evenly and the tile sheets laid carefully on it with the paper side up. After the batch is covered, the tile setter should commence to press the tile into the mortar, gently at first, firmly afterwards, using block and hammer, thus leveling the tile as correctly as possible. The tile should be beaten down until the mortar is visible in the joints through the paper; however, without breaking it. The paper is then moistened, and after it is well soaked and can be easily removed, it is pulled off backwards, starting from a comer. After removing the paper, the tile should be sprinkled with white sand before fin- ishing the beating, so that the tiles will not adhere to the beater, owing to the paste which is used in mount- ing them. Corrections of the surface are then made by leveling it with block and hammer. The filling of the joints and cleaning of the surface is a delicate op- eration, as the looks of this work depends largely upon it. The joints are to be filled with clean Portland gemeut mixed with water, This mixture is forced iato HOW TO USE THEM m the joints with a flat trowel (not with a broom, which often scrapes out the joints). After the joints are /I — SCREED ^CONCRETE Fig. 39. filled, the surplus cement is removed from the sur- face by drawing a wet piece of canton flannel over it. Fig. 40. This piece of cloth must be washed out frequently with clean water. After the floor is cleaned, it should be 490 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES allowed to stand for a day or two, when tlie whole floor is to be rubbed with sharp sand and a board of soft lumber. This treatment, which the last traces of cement, is preferable to the washing off with an acid solution, as it will not attack the cement in the joints. In laying the tile sheets on the cement, care should be taken to have the widths of joints spaced the same as the tile on the sheets to prevent the floor having a block appearance. cove BAH Pig. 41. The Tiles for the Walls or Wainscoting are first laid out and compared with the plan provided for setting them. Guide strips are then placed on the wall paral- lel and about two feet apart, the bottom one being so HOW TO USE THEM 491 arranged as to allow the base to be set after the body is in place. (See Fig. 40.) When a cove base is used it maj' be necessary to set it first, but in all eases must be well supported on the concrete. (See Pig. 41.) The strips must be placed plumb and even with the intend- ed finished wall line. The method of setting wall tile is governed to some extent by the conditions of the wall on which they are to be set, and must be decided by the mechanic at the time, which process he will use, whether buttering or floating, as equally good work can be done by either, by following the instruc- tions, as stated below. Floating Wall Tile. — The mortar is spread between the guide strips for about five feet at a time and lev- elled with a screed notched at each end to allow for the thickness of the tile. (See Fig, 39.) The tiles are placed in position and tamped until they are firmly united to the cement and level with the strips. When the space between the strips is completed, which should, be one side of the room, the strips are removed and the work continued in the same manner until com- pleted. When the tiles are all set, the joints must be carefully washed out and neatly filled with thinly mixed pure Keene's Cement, and all cement remaining on the tile carefully wiped off. Buttering Wall Tiles.i — The cement mortar is spread on the back of each tile, and the tile placed' on the wall, and tapped gently until firmly united to the wall and plumb with the guide strips. When the tiles are all set, the joints must be carefully washed out and filled with Keene's Cement, and the tiles cleaned as directed above. When fixtures of any kind are to be placed on the 492 CEMENTS AND CONCHETES tile work, such as plumbing in bathroom, provision should be made for them by fastening wood strips on the wall before the rough or first coating of cement mortar is put on, the strips to be the same thickness as the rough coating. The tiles can be placed over the strips by covering them with cement mortar, and when thoroughly set, holes' can be bored in the tiles for fastening the fixtures without injuring the tiling. Hearth and Facing Tile are set in the same manner as for floors and walls; Cleaning. — It is absolutely necessary to remove with sawdust, and afterwards with a flannel cloth and wa- ter, all traces of cement which may have been left on the surface of the tile, as it is hard to remove after it is set. After thoroughly cleaning the floor, it should be covered with sawdust and boards placed on the floor for several days where there is walking upon it. A white scum sometimes appears on the surface of the tile, caused by the cement. This can generally be removed by washing frequently with plenty of soap and water. If this does not remove it, then use a weak solution of 15 parts muriatic acid and 85 parts wa- ter, which should only be allowed to remain on the tile for a few minutes, and then thoroughly washed off. Cutting of Tile.— When it is found necessary to cut tile the following directions are given : Toolsj~The chisels used should be made of the best tool steel, and should always be sharp. They should be of small size, the edge not being wider than one- fourth inch. The hammer should be light, weighing about six ounces, having a slender handle. After the HOW TO USE THEM 493 exact shape of the tile has been determined, lines should be drawn on the surface of the tile with a lead pencil, giving the exact direction of the cut desired. This line should be followed with the chisel, which is held at right angles with the surface, the hammer giviag the chisel sharp, decisive raps. After the line has been repeatedly traversed with the chisel, a few- sharp blows against the back of the tile opposite the mark on the face will break it at the place thus marked. To cut glazed or enamel tiles, they should be scratched on the surface with a tool at the place where it is desired to break them, and then gently tapped on the back opposite the scratch. Caution should be used not to allow any one to walk upon or carry anything heavy over the floor, or have any pounding about wall work for several days, or until the tiles are firmly set. Unless these precau- tions are taken it will be impossible to guarantee a first-class job. Tile work is frequently condemned when the fault lies with the rush of other contractors to finish their work. Laying Tile on Wood. — A new material called " Monolith, " manufactured by The "Wisconsin Mantel & Tile Co., that enables the workman to lay tiles on a wooden floor. There are many places where tile could be used, but on account of the added weight to the floor by the use of cement, concrete foundation, it is impracticable to lay in many places, but by the use of Monolith, the only weight that is added is the tile itself and the Monolith bed it is laid in. Both ma- terials are only five-eighths of an inch in thickness when laid. 494 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES HOW TO USE THEM 495 The illustration, Fig. 42, shows the method of laying the tile. The paper to which the small pieces of tiles are glued is seen on top of tiles. The dark part show^s the patent cement, or Monolith. I show herewith, at Nos. 43 and 44, twelve designs for decorative borders of various kinds, and in 45 and 46 I show two designs well suited for vestibules, store entrances or for hearths in fire-places. Good Concrete. — In determining the proportions of the aggregates and cement for a certain piece of work, it is necessary usually to take samples of the broken stone (or gravel) and sand which are most available to the site and make measurements of the percentage of voids in the stone which must be filled by the sand and the percentage of voids in the sand which must be filled, by the cement. This is done by taking a cubic foot box and filling it with broken stone in a thoroughly wet state. The box is then filled with as much water as is required to completely fill it, in addi- tion to the stone, which upon being poured off gives the relation between the volume of the voids and the volume of the stone. The required amount of local sand thus determined is then measured out and placed in the box with the stone in a damp state. Water is then used to determine the percentage of voids left in the sand, which gives the approximate amount of cement required, although an excess of cement is al- most invariably used. Engineers everjrwhere differ regarding the best proportion to be used, but in gen- eral the above test, roughly made, will determine it well enough. The proportions which are most univer- sally used are as follows: 1 cement, 2 sand, 4 broken stone; where extremely strong work is desired. Tests i96 CEMEiNTS AND CONCRETES *" ^ BOBOEH No. 411 BOBDEB No. 412 ^^TO^MMMM'^^ ^ffe: ^aVi'AVi'iWiWA^r'AVi'AVr'A'iVA'i'i'A^'T'A'r'i'A'r'i'ifWAVr ma ■ i^^^M^g^Wf^^ m BORDEl No. 413 SOBDER No. bis i % * ;1 ; ! 414 ■ ; - iWM 1 1 ^ f 1 ffl5 ( f^ 1 p i i; i J ■! ; ! ■ ! 1 - . 1 i ^^ >: i >"-" M ^^1 fi P s B i Border No. 415 Decorative Borders in Round, Square and One Inch Hexagons of Various Colors. Fig-. 13. HOW TO USE THEM 497 A Series of Borders in Square Tiles, Each in a Variety of Colors. Fig-. 44 498 CEMENTS AND CONCREIES show that a 6-inch thickness of 1-2-4 concrete properly made is waterproof up to about 50 pounds to the square inch. This concrete is frequently used for facing dams. 1-3-6 is the proportion generally used for the interior of dams and large structures. It is entirely suitable for large foundations. 1-4-8 is frequently used for foundation work, and when properly mixed Pig. 45. makes good concrete, although it is about the limit of what is considered good work, and would not be suitable for very important structures. 1-5-10 is equal to any concrete made with natural cement. It is a well-known fact that the volume of concrete when mixed with water is somewhat less than the volume of the aggregate and cement before mixing. The con- tractors' rule is that the volume of mixed concrete is HOW TO USE THEM 499 equal to the volume of the stone plus one-half to one- third the volume of sand. There has been much discussion among engineers and others as to the amount of water that should be added to the aggregates and cement for making the best concrete, and while it is not the purpose of this paper to enter into this controversy, it might be said that the modern tendency is toward wet concrete. The old way was to add just enough water so that when all 4 '^!^0>WW^^Wt^9^^I^^W^-^^^^W^^FA Pig. 46. the concrete was in the form and tamped, it would show moisture on the surface. The tamping is a very iifiportant part of the operation, and the quality of the work is dependent upon how well this is super- intended, as unless it is well and thoroughly done the concrete is liable to be honeycombed and imperfect, especially near the forms. With the growth of the 500 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES use of concrete the old method of putting it in the forms nearly dry and depending on tamping to con- solidate it has been more or less abandoned, and the more modern way is to put the concrete in quite wet. as less tamping is required and much labor and ex- pense saved. One of the great objections to this scheme is that if care is not taken the water will tend to wash the cement from the stone and sand; in other words, unmix it. However, it may be said that it is now generally understood that rather wet concrete properly handled makes better work. The amount of water to be added to the aggregates and cement va- ries from 1 water to 3 cement by measurement to 12 per cent of water by weight. Mr. Carey, of New- haven, England^ says that 23 gallons water per cubic yard of cement was the best mixture. Quite frequent- ly salt water is used in mixing concrete in cold weather to prevent freezing, and it seems to have no ill effects on the resulting mixture. Reinforced Concrete. — Up to the last few years the use of concrete as a building material was chiefly con- fined to the construction of foundations, piers, reser- voir dams and similar purposes, in which the stresses to be met were almost entirely simple pressures. lii- deed, even fifteen years ago, ' many engineers looked askance on the use of concrete for arches, considering it for this purpose much inferior to brick. Much of the caution shown in extending the use of this valua- ble material doubtless arose from the frequency with which concrete masonry exhibited unsightly cracks, due largely to the material being allowed to get too dry while hardening. At the same time, careful ex- amination has shown that cracks of the same char- HOW TO USE THEM 501 acter are common in masonry of all kinds, but are unnoticed, because they follow the regular joints of the structure; whereas, on the smooth uniform sur- face of the concrete, cracks of much less significance are immediately visible. The plan of reinforcing the material with metal, of which several systems have been introduced during the last four years, has greatly extended the possible use of concrete; and it appears that in many eases a reinforced concrete bridge may compete, even in first cost, with a steel girder; while as regards upkeep, it has, of course, many advantages. Small bridge cul- verts of this material were extensively used by Rus- sian engineers in building the- Manchurian Railway. For openings of some 7-foot span, flat slabs of con- crete reinforced with rails were used, the thickness being 81^ inches. A similar system was used for spans up to 21 feet, the concrete, however, being thickened at the center as the span increased, the depth at this point being 2 feet 6i^ inches for the 21-ioot span, and proportionately less for smaller openings. The thick- ness at the bearings was, however, the same in all eases, viz., 8^ inches. The line was thrown over the spans as little as sfeven days after completion. The concrete consisted of one part cement, two sand and five broken stone. The system in this case had great advantages, as stone for masonry was unobtainable, and could, moreover, only be used for arches, which , would have necessitated the use of higher embank- ments than were required with the ferro-concrete, used as described. Much larger spans have, of course, been built than those mentioned. One, . of 153-foot span, carrying four main line tracks, has recently been 502 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES built for the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Rail- road, while Mr. Edwin Thacker, M. Am. Soe. C. E., states he considers the system feasible for spans up to 500 feet, and has actually got out designs for a span 300 feet, the cost comparing favorably with that of a steel bridge. One great drawback to the extension of the system lies in the difficulty in proportioning structures thus built in a thoroughly rational manner. In the case of steel bridges certain simple assumptions as to the elasticity and strength of the material suffice. These assumptions are doubtless not absolutely exact, but are sufSeiently near the truth for practical purposes. The elastic properties of concrete are, however, very dif- ferent from those of steel; Hooke's law is -not evefi ap- proximately correct, and, moreover, the material al- ways takes a permanent set when first loaded. The true distribution of the stress and strain on a concrete beam is thus a much more complicated matter than it is in the ease of a steel joist, in which it is permissible, within working limits of stress, to assume the accuracy of Hooke 's law. The assumption generally made in the case of ferro-concrete is that plane sections of a concrete beam remain plane after bending. This pos- tulate is, of course, that commonly made in propor- tioning steel work; and in the latter case, stress being proportional to strain, the usual formula for the work- ing strength of beams is readily reduced. In the ease of concrete, however, the stress-strain curve is much more complex. Nevertheless, M. Considere has shown that by making experiments on concrete in simple ten- sion and compression, and plotting the corresponding stress-strain curves, it is possible to deduce from these HOW TO USE THEM 503 with fair accuracy the load-deflection curve of a ferro- concrete beam. This method, though logical, leads, however, to no simple formula for the strength; and in applying this method the working load of any particular concrete beam would have to be deduced by the tedious proc- ess of scaling off the stress-strain curves at a num- ber of points, and combining the results. A further question arises as to whether this stress-strain curve should be the initial stress-strain of the concrete, or that obtained after repeated loadings. Probably the latter is the best to choose, but in that case it by no means follows that the metal reinforcement is free from initial stresses when the load is applied to the beam ; and if the metal is subject to initial stress, it is obvious that similar ones must exist in the concrete. In fact, M. Considere has shown that this is necessarily the case in any circumstances, since, if the concrete is allowed to harden under water, it tends to expand, and this expansion is resisted by the metal reinforce- ment. If, on the other hand, the hardening takes place in air the concrete tends to contract; and this contraction being again resisted by the metal, a series of fine hair cracks are produced which, visible at low loads, are readily detected on the tension side of a heavily loaded ferro-concrete beam. In view of the uncertainties introduced by the dif- ferent factors above mentioned, it is really questionable whether, after all, the theoretically objectionable for- mula of M. Hennebique is not as gbod as any other. The latter all involve a preliminary calculation of the position of the neutral axis, which varies with the per- centage of metal used, and with the type of stress- 504 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES strain curve assumed for the concrete; and also with the maximum stress at any particular section. Thus, in a centrally-loaded beam, its position at the ends is entirely different from what it is at the centre. M Henhebique, on the other hand, makes no attempt tc locate this neutral axis, and simply assumes that one- half of his beam resists compression, and that thf stress is uniformly distributed over this half. The moment of this compression about the centre of the section equates to half the moment due to the load, and the other half of the moment due to the load he equates to the moment about the centre of the section of the tensile stress on the metal reinforcement. The working strength of concrete in compression, he takes as 350 pounds per square inch, and neglects entirely its strength in tension. The working tehsile stress on the steel reinforcement he takes as 14,000 pounds per square inch. This method is, of course, totally illogi- cal, yet many thousand cubic yards of ferro-concrete have been successfully designed on these lines; and a comparison of the strength of ferro-concrete beams as calculated by this -formula, and by those of a more rational type, shows very little difference between the two for a considerable range of metal to concrete. On the other hand, it must not be forgotten that formulae which are non-rational in form are always risky when applied to extreme conditions. Concrete beitig as weak in shear as in tension, pro- vision is also required to take the shearing stresses. Some American designers have to this end patented special forms of reinforcement bar, in which each main tension bar has projecting upward from the ties in- clined at an angle of 45 degrees. These extend to the HOW TO USE THEM 505 top of the bar and take the tensile stresses arising from the shear. The corresponding compressive stress at right angles to this is carried by the concrete. The system is doubtless efficient, and on large spans, where "weight must be reduced to a minimum it may have some advantage; but in work of ordinary proportions it seems to be little superior to the Hennebique sys- tem, in which the_ necessary strengthening is provid- ed by stirrups of flat iron bent into a U shape. The main reinforcing bars rest in these stirrups at the lower ends. The spacing of the stirrups depends upon the "web stresses" to be taken, which can easily be calculated by assuming the reinforced beam to be a latticed girder, the lower chord of which is represented by the metal reinforcement, the upper one by the centre of the compression half of the beam, while the stirrups represent vertical ties, which may be taken as con- nected together at top and bottom by inclined imag- inary struts. The advantage of this simple method of reinforcing for shear lies in the possibility of using common rolled sections for the whole of the rein- forcement. M. Hennebique constructs most of his f erro-concrete work on the monolithic system, girders, piers, columns and floors being solidly connected together. It is, therefore, ' necessary to provide for the reversed bend- ing moments over the point of support, which is done by bending up half of the total reinforcement bars, so that the ends of the span are close to the upper surface of the beam, and thus in a position to take the heavy tensile stresses which ensue at these points when the monolithic system of construction is fol- lowed. The exact calculation of the reactions and 506 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES bending moments here is impracticable, if not actually impossible; and those engineers who attach much im-^ portance to having all structures statically determinate will doubtless object to the plan, but experience shows that the advantages gained are very considerable. The structure then resists as a unit, and in particular its rigidity is marvelous. Some comparative tests on this point, made by the Railway Company, showed that with' a ferro-concrete floor subjected to blows four times as heavy as were applied to an equivalent floor constructed of brick arches on steel joists, the deflection was only one- seventh as great. The extreme rigidity attainable with the monolithic system of construction was also very evident in the case of the large Hennebique bridge at Purfleet. Since a structure fails by strain rather than by stress, the small deformation rioted with ferro-concrete are evi- dent that as an averag'e the material is relatively lit- tle tried by the loads carried. It must, however, be admitted that this low average strain is quite com- patible with extremely severe strain at particular points ; but it is, of course, the business of the designer, by suitably disposing his material to avoid these pos- sible local abnormalities. Occasionally, doubts have been expressed as to whether the metallic reinforcement may not suffer from corrosion as time goes on. This would be extremely dangerous if it occurred, since the metal being out of sight, its loss of strength might remain undetected un- til, some day, the structure might fall under its -ordi- nary working load. Fortunately, much evidence is available to the effect that steel or iron thoroughly HOW TO USE THEM 507 imbedded in concrete is permanently protected from rust. Americans, indeed, are so positive on this point that they have recently constructed a number of reser- ■voir dams in ferro-concrete. In some cases these have been arched, but in others they have been straight. The cross-section in the latter case is generally a hollow triangle, the sides of which are connected together by diaphragm walls from point to point. The dam is also anchored to its site, though generally the weight pro- vided is sufficient to make the structure safe against overturning, quite apart from the help received from the anchor-bars. Progress in the use of reinforced concrete has been somewhat slow in England. The railway engineers, in view of their enormous responsibilities, have not un- naturally hesitated to adopt a material in which it was impossible to calculate the strength with accuracy, and of which experience as to its reliability was very re- cent. In the larger cities, moreover, its use has, quite apart from this, been restricted by the inelastic na- ture of the building regulations, which have been reached upon the assumption that finality had been reached in the matter of building construction. Hence, permission to erect warehouses and factories in ferro- concrete has always been difficult — and often impossi- ble— to obtain, though experience has shown that the new material is most excellent as a fire-resister. At the great Baltimore fire it was found that the concrete exposed to the flames was seldom damaged to a greater depth than one-half inch, though projecting corners suffered somewhat more, being rounded off by the flames to a radius of about two inches, pointing to the advisability of constructing the concrete with well- 508 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES rounded corners in the first instance. The only rea- sonable grounds of objection to any proposed system of building construction are its dangers from a struc- tural sanitary or fire-risk point of view. As a result of much investigation and experiment, the following conclusions were arrived at for the guidance of the designer and constructor of reinforced concrete: 1. What drawings and details should be prepared before work is commenced. 2. The nature of the materials which may be em- ployed and the standards to which these should com- ply, i. e., (a) the metal in reinforcement, (b) the matrix, (c) the sand, (d) the gravel, stone, clinker or other aggregate, (e) water. 3. What are the proportions for concrete to be used in different cases. 4. How the ingredients for concrete are to be mixed and deposited on the work. 5. The distances to be allowed between the reinfor- cing bars and what covering of concrete is necessary. 6. What precautions are necessary in the design and erection of centring and false work, and how long the whole or portion of centring and false work should re- main in position. 7. The rules which should be used in determining the dimensions of the several parts necessary for secur- ity, and what safe stresses should be allowed. 8. The supervision necessary and the special matters to which it should be directed. HOW TO USE THEM 509 9. The fire-resisting properties of reinforced con- crete. 10. Its adaptability for structures where resistance to liquid pressure is essential, and what special precau- tions may be advisable under these conditions. 11. "What are the necessary conditions for its perma- nence; resistance to rusting of metal, disintegration of concrete or effects of vibration-. 12. The testing of the materials employed and of the finished structures. 13. "What provisions are desirable in Building Laws or Government regulations relating to buildings and other structures so far as these affect the use of rein- forced concrete. INDEX PAGE MATERIALS : Limes 27 Cements 30 Mortars 28 Sand 28 Plasters and laths 31 WORKMANSHIP : External work 35 Internal work 37 SPECIFICATION CLAUSES: Materials 42 "Workmanship 43 PREPARATION OF BILL OF QUANTITIES: Materials 46 Workmanship 46 Laths 48 TOOLS AND APPLIANCES : Hoes and drags 50 '- The hawk 52 The mortar board. 52 Trowels 52 Floats 52 Moulds 54 The pointer 54 The paddle 55 Stopping and picking out tools 55 Mitering rod 55 Scrateher '■ 55 511 512 INDEX PAGi TOOLS AND APPLIANCES.— Continued. Hod 55 Sieve 56 Sand screens 56 Mortar beds 57 Slack box .- 57 Lathing 57 Lather 's hatchet 58 Nail poekef 58 Cut-off saw 58 PLASTER, LIME, CEMENTS, SAND, ETC. : Plaster of Paris '. 60 Quick and slow setting plaster 62 Testing 63 French plaster 65 Limes 65 Hydraulic limes 66 Calcination 69 Slaking 70 Mortar 73 Hardening of mortar 78 Magnesia in mortars 82 Effects of salt and frost in mortar 84 Sugar with cement .....: 86 Sugar jn mortar 88 Lime putty 89 Setting stuff _. . 90 Haired putty setting ". . 91 Lime water 91 Hair 91 Fibrous substitutes for hair 92 Sawdust as a substitute for hair 93 Sand 94 Mastic 96 Scotch mastic 96 Common mastic 97 Mastic manipulation 97 INDEX 513 PAQB PLASTER, LIME, CEMENT, ETC.— Continued. Hamelein 's mastic 97 Mastic cement 98 TERMS AND PROCESSES : Three-coat work 99 First coating 99 Scratching 100 Rendering 102 Screeds 103 Floating 103 Flanking 106 Scouriag coarse stuff ' Ill Keying 112 Setting 114 Laying setting stuff 115 Scouring setting stuff 115 Troweling and brushing setting stuff 116 General remarks on setting 117 Common setting 119 Skimming 119 Colored setting 119 Gauged setting 120 Gauged putty set : 120 Putty set 121 Internal angles 121 External angles 121 Skirtings 122 Two coat work 123 One-and-a-half coat work 123 Stucco : 124 Old stucco 124 Common stucco 129 Rough stucco 129 Bastard stucco 130 Troweled stucco 130 Colored stucco 131 Method of working cements 131 514 INDEX PAGE TERMS AND PROCESSES— Continued. White cement efflorescence 138 Cornice brackets , 139 Cornices 140 Mitring 155 Mitre mould 156 Fixing enrichments 159 Mitring enrichments 160 Pugging 163 Sound ceilings 164 Cracked plaster work 165 Repairing old plaster 165 Gauged work 168 Joist lines on ceilings 169 Rough casting 170 VARIOUS METHODS OP RUNNING COR- NICES, CIRCLES, ELLIPSES AND OTHER ORNAMENTAL STUCCO WORK: Diminished columns 177 Column trammel 180 Constructing plain diminished columns 183 To set. out the flutes of diminished columns. . . . 183 Constructing diminished fluted columns 185 Forming diminished fluted column by the rim method 193 Running diminished fluted column by the Col- lar method -. 196 Diminished fluted pilasters 200 Pannelled coves ' 200 Diminished mouldings : 204 False screed method 204 Running double diminished mouldings . . .- 208 Diminished rule method 208 Top rule method 211 Cupola panels and mouldings 215 Panelled beams :'i. '220 INDEX 515 PAGE VARIOUS METHODS, ETC.— Continued. Trammels for elliptical mouldings 220 Templates for elliptical mouldings 224 Plasterer's oval 228 Coved ceilings 233 Circle mouldings on circular surfaces 233 Forming niches 235 Eunning an elliptical moulding in situ 240 MISCELLANEOUS MATTERS: Depeter 243 Sgraffitto 243 Fresco , 251 Fresco secco 255 Indian fresco and marble plaster 256 Scagliolia 260 Artificial marbles 262 Pick's neoplaster 263 Scagliolia manufacture 264 Mixing 270 Colors and quantities 272 Polishing white scagliolia 275 Polishing scagliolia 276 Marezzo 277 Granite finish 282 Granite plastering 283 CEMENTS AND CONCRETES AND HOW TO USE THEM: Fine concrete 291 Matrix 293 Aggregate ' . . 294 Porous aggregates 295 Compound aggregates 296 Sand and cement 297 Fire-proof aggregates 300 Voids in aggregates , 302 Crushing strength of concrete 302 516 INDEX PAOE CEMENTS AND CONCRETES— Continued. Water for concrete 303 Gauging concrete 305 Ramming concrete '. 308 Thickness of concrete paving 309 Concrete paving 310 Eureka paving 312 Eureka aggregate 313 Eureka quantities 314 Levels and falls 315 Pavement foundations 316 Screeds and sections 318 Laying concrete pavements 320 Troweling concrete 321 Grouting , 322 Dusting 322 Temperature 322 Non-slippery pavements 323 Grooves and roughened surfaces 323 Stamped concrete 325 Expansion joints 325 Washing yards 328 Stable pavements 328 Concrete slab moulds 329 Slab making 330 Induration concrete slabs 330 Mosaic 331 Concrete mosaic 333 Concrete mosaic laid in situ 334 Storing cement 337 Cement mortar 337 Mixing 338 Grout , 339 Lime and cement mortar 339 Cement mortar for plastering 339 Materials for making concrete sand 340 Gravel 341 INDEX 517 PAGE CEMENTS AND CONCRETES.— Continued. Crushed stone 341 Stone versus gravel 342 Cinders 342 Concrete 343 Proportioning materials .- 344 Aggregate containing fine material 345 Mechanical mixers 346 Mixing by hand 346 Consistency of concrete 347 Use of quick setting cement 347 Coloring cement work 347 Depositirig concrete 348 Eetempering 349 Concrete exposed to sea-water 349 Concrete work in freezing weather 350 Rubble concrete 350 To face concrete 351 Wood for forms 352 Concrete sidewalks 352 Excavation and preparation of subgrade 353 The subf oundation 353 The foundation 353 The top dressing or wearing surface 354 Details of construction 384 Concrete basement floors 358 Concrete stable floors and driveways 358 Concrete steps 359 Reinforced concrete fence posts 360 Reinforcement 362 Concrete for fence posts 362 Molds for fence posts 363 Attaching fence wire to posts 365 Molding and curing posts 365 Concrete building blocks 368 Tests of concrete fence posts 370 Betempering , . . . . 37§ 518 INDEX PAGE CEMENTS AND CONCRETES.— Continued. Some practical notes 380 Concrete stairway and steps 387 Cast concrete" stairs 389 Test of steps 390 Concrete stairs formed in situ 391 Setting out old stairs 391 Nosings and risers 392 Framing staircases 394 Centring for landings and soffits 396 Waterproof centring 397 Staircase materials 399 Filling in stairs 400 Finishing stairs 404 Non-slippery steps 405 Striking centrings 405 Concrete and iron 406 Setting concrete soffits 408 Fibrous concrete 408 Polished soffits '. 409 Concrete staircases and fibrous plaster 410 Dowel holes 410 Cast steps 411 Treads and risers 412 Closed outer strings '. 413 Concrete floors 413 Plaster floors 415 Joist concrete floors 416 Caminus concrete cement 417 Concrete floors and coffered ceilings 418 Combined concrete floors and panelled ceilings . 419 Concrete and wood 420 Concrete drying 421 Concrete slab floors 423 Construction of slab floors 425 Hollow floors ■ 427 Concrete roofs 428 INDEX 519 PAGE CEMENTS AND CONCRETES.-Continued. Notes on concrete 429 Cast concrete 431 Concrete dressing .' 432 Mouldings cast in situ 438 Modelling in fine concrete 443 Concrete fountains 446 Concrete tanks 446 Concrete sinks 448 . Garden edging 44S Concrete vases 448 Concrete mantel pieces 449 Colored concrete 449 Fixing blocks 452 Typical system of reinforced concrete construc- tions from various sources 452 Columns and piles 458 Floors, slabs and roofs 468 Beams 469 Arches 471 Lintels 473 Concrete walls 475 Strong rooms , 475 Concrete coffins and cementation 475 Tile fixing 477 Setting floor and wall file 479 Foundations .' . 479 Lime mortar 480 Concrete 480 For floors 480 For wood floors 483 In old buildings 481 For hearths 482 For walls 484 Cement 486 Sand 486 Mortar 486 520 INDEX CEMENTS AND CONCRETES.— Continued. Soaking 486 Tiles for floors 486 Ceramics 488 Files for walls and wainscoting 490 Floating wall tile 491 Buttering wall tiles 491 Hearth and facing tile 492 Cleaning 492 Cutting of tile 492 Tools 492 Laying tile on wood 493 Good concrete 495 Reinforced concrete 500 NOTICE To the many workmen who are purchasing the publications under the authorship of Fred T. Hodgson, and who we feel sure have been benefited by his excellent treatises on many Carpentry and Building subjects, we desire to Inform them that the following list of books have been published •since 1903, thereby making them strictly up-to-date In every detail. All of the newer books bearing the Imprint of Frederick J. Drake & Co. are modern In every respect and of a purely self -educational character, expressly Issued for Home Study. PBACTICAL USES OF THE STEEL SQUARE, two volumes, over 500 pages. Including 100 perspective views and floor plans of medium- priced houses. Cloth, two volumes, price $2.00. Half leather., price $3.00. MODERN CARPENTRY AND JOINERY, 300 pages. Including 50 house plans, perspective views and floor plans of medium and low-cost houses. Cloth, price $1.00. Half leather, price $1.60, BUILDERS' ARCHITECTURAL DRAWING SELF-TAUGHT, over 350 pages. Including 50 house plans. Cloth, price $2.00. Half leather, price $3.00. MODERN ESTIMATOR AND CONTRACTORS' GUIDE, for pricing build- ers' work, 350 pages, including 60 house plans. Cloth, price $1.50. Half leather, price $2.00. MODERN LOW-COST AMERICAN HOMES, over 200 pages. Cloth, price $1.00. Half leather, price $1.60. PRACTICAL UP-TO-DATE HARDWOOD FINISHER, over 300 pages. Cloth, price $1.00. Half Leather, price $1.6Q. COMMON SENSE STAIR BUILDING AND HANDRAILING, over 250 pages, Including perspective views and floor plans of 50 medium-priced houses. Cloth, price $1.00. Half leather, price $1.60. STOWEMASONS' AND BRICKLAYERS' GUIDE, over 200 pages. C3oth, price $1.60. Half leather, price $2.00. PRACTICAL WOOD CARVING, over 200 pages. Cloth, price $1.50. Half leather, price $2.00. Sold by booksellers generally, or sent, all charges paid, upon receipt of price, to any address in the world FREDERICK J. DRAKE & CO. Publishers CHICAGO, ; ; ; ; U.S.A. ^modern Carpentry Vol. 2 AlrVAJflCEiD SKRIEIS = Bv jfrcd 2. ibodflson This is a continuation o( Mr. Hodgson's first volume on Modeirn Carpentry and is intended to carry the student to a higher plane than is reached by the first volume. The first volume of this series may be considered as the al- phabet of the science of car- pentry and joinery, while the present volume leads the stu- dent into the intricacies of the art and shows how certain difficult problems may be solved with a minimum of labor. Every progressive workman — and especially those who have purchased the first volume of this series — cannot afford to be without this volume, as it con- tains so many things necessary the advanced workman should know, and that is likely to crop up at any time during his daily labors. The work is well illustrated with over 1 00 diagrams, sket^es and scale drawings which are fully described and explained in the text. Many puzzling working problems are shown, described and solved. This is truly a valuable aid and assistant for the progressive workman. 300 pages, fully illustrated. 12mo, cloth, price, $1.00 Sold by Booksellers generally or sent postpaid to any address upon receipt of price by the Publishers FREDERICK J. DRAKE & CO. PUBLISHERS CHICAGO, U. S. A. (Hontrartnr 0 dmJip TO CORRECT MEASUREMENTS of areas and cubic contents in all matters relating to buildings of any kind. Illustrated with numerous diagrams, sketches and examples showing how various and intricate measure- ments should be tak^n :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: :: By Fred T. Hodgson, Architect, and W. M. Brown, C.B. and Qnantity Surveyor TSTHIS is a real practical book, ^^ showing how all kinds of odd, crooked and difficult meas- urements may be taken to secure correct results. This work in no way conflicts with any work on estimating ^s it does not give prices, neither does it attempt to deal with questions of labor or estimate how much the execution of cer- tain works will cost. It simply deals with the questions of areas and cubic contents of any given work and shows how their areas and contents may readily be obtained, and fur- nishes for the regular estimator the data upon which he can base his prices. In fact, the work is a great aid and assist- ant to the regular estimator and of inestimable value to the general builder and contractor. 12mo, cloth, 300 pages, fully illustrated, price - $1.50 Sold by Bookaellers generally or sent postpaid to any address upon receipt <^ price by the Publishers FREDERICK J. DRAKE & CO. PUBUSHERS CHICAGO. U.S.A. STEEL SQUARE A TREATISE OF THE PRAGTIGAL USES OF By FRED. T. HOUGSON, Jtrchitect. New and up-to-date. Do not mistake this edition for the one published over twenty years aso. This is the latest practical work oM the Steel Square and its uses pub- ished. Itisthorough, accurate, clear and easily understood. Confounding terms and phrases have been relig- ously aToidedwhere possible, ind everything in the book has been Dade so plain that a boy twelve years )f age, possessing ordinary intelli- ;ence, can understand it from begin- ling to end. ■ It is an exhaustive work including ome very ingenious devices for laying lut bevels for rafters, braces and other Dclined work; also chapters on the Iquare as a calculating machine, show- Qg how to measure Solids, Surfaces nd Distances— very useful to builders nd estimators. Chapters on roofing nnd how to form them by the aid at he Square, Octagon, Hexagon, Hip nd other roofs are shown and ex- ilained, and the manner of getting t lie rafters and ]acks given. Chapters nheavy timber framing, showing how he Square is used for laying out Mor- ^_^ tises, Tenons, Shoulders, Inclined ^ork. Angle Corners and slmilai work. The work also contains a large number of diagrams, showing how the Square may be used in finding Bevels. Angles , Stair Treads and bevel cuts tor Hip, valley. Jack and other Bafters, besides methods for laying out Stair Strings, Stair Carriages and Timber Structures generally. Also contains 26 beautiful halftone illustrations of the perspective and floor plana of 26 medium priced houses. The work abounds with hundreds of fine illustrations and explanw tory diagrams which will prove a perfect mine of instruction for tb« mechanic, young or old. Two large volumes, 660 pages, nearly 600 Ulustrations, printed on ■ superior quality of paper from new large type. Price, 2 Vols., cloth binding ...tZ.M Price, 2 Vols., half-leather binding 3.00 SIngIa Volumes, Part I, cloth 1.00 " " Part I,half- leather 1.50 Partil,cloth „.. 1.00 ~ I.5J>I °' " Part 11, one halt-leather SEND FOR COMPLETE ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE FREE FREDERICK J. DRAKE ®l PUBLISHERS OF SELF-EDUCATIONAL BOOKS CHICAGO, ILL. CO. UP=TO=DATE HARDWOOD FINISHER IN TWO PARTS By FRED T. HODGSON, Architect Member of Ontario Association of Archiiecis, Editor of ^^ National Builder^'' and author of the ^^Modern Estimator and Contractors^ Guide^'" ^'Modern Carpentry, ''^ -."Architectural Drawing Self-Taught," *■*■ Practical Uses of the Steel Square " etc^ PART ONE, giving: roles and methods for working hardwoods, with description of tools required, the nkethods of nsingf, and how^ to sharpen and care for them, including saws, planes, files, scrapers, chisels, gouges and other wood- worlcing tools. How to choose hard- -woods for various purposes, and how to work and properly manage veneers. The proper use of glue, directions for preparing glue, blind or secret nailing, how done and how^ finished. How^ to sharpen and use scrapers of various forms, with illustrations showing the tools and how to handle tliem properly, etc. PART TWO treats on the filling, staining, varnishing, polishing, gilding and enameling woodwork of all kinds of woods. It also treats on renovating old work, repolishing, revarnishing and w^ood-finishing generally. There is a short treatise en dyeing w^oods in various colors for inlaying and marquetry work, w^ith rules for making staining, dyes, fiUers, and polishes of various kinds, French polishing, hard-oil finish, rubbed and fiat finish, treatment of hard- wood floors, waxing, polishing, shellacking and general finishing of hardwood in all conditions. %i >-* LARGE 12M0 CLOTH, 320 PAGES, 117 ILLUSTRATIONS. PRICE, $1.00 HALF LEATHER BINDING, GILT TOPS . . PRICE, $1.50 CO. FREDERICK J. DRAKE ®. PUBLISHERS OF SELF-EDUCATIONAL BOOKS CHICAGO, ILL. PRACTICAL BUNGALOWS AND COTTAGES FOR TOWN AND COUNTRY THIS BOOK CONTAINS PERSPECTIVE DRAWINGS AND FLOOR PLANS OF ONE HUNDRED LOW AND MEDIUM PRICED HOUSES RANGING FROM FOUR HUNDRED TO FOUR THOUSAND DOLLARS EACH. ALSO TWENTY-FIVE SELECTED DESIGNS OF BUNGALOWS FOR SUMMER AND COUNTRY HOMES, FURNISHING THE PROSPECTIVE BUILDER WITH MANY NEW AND UP-TO-DATE IDEAS AND SUG- GESTIONS IN MODERN ARCHITECTURE THE HOUSES ADVERTISED IN THIS BOOK ARE EN- TIRELY DIFFERENT IN STYLE FROM THOSE SHOWN IN HODGSON'S LOW COST HOMES , 12 MO. CLOTH, 200 PAGES, 300 ILLUSTRATIONS PRICE, POSTPAID $1.00 FREDERICK J. DRAKE & CO. CHICAGO Practical lIp-to-Date By George B. Clow Over 150 Illustrations A PRACTICAL up-to-date work on Sanitary Plumbine, com- prising useful information on the wiping and soldering of lead pipe joints and the installation of hot and cold water and drainage systems into -modern residences. Including the gravity tank supply and cylinder -and tank system of water heating and the pressure cylinder system of water heating. Connections for bath tub. Connections for water closet. Connections for laundry tubs. Connections for wash-bowl or lavatory. A modern bath room. Bath tubs. Lavatories. Closets. Urinals. Laundry tubs. Shower baths. Toilet room in offipe buildings. Sinks. Faucets. Bibb-cocks. Soil- pipe fittings. Drainage fittings. Plumber's tool kit, etc., etc< 256 pages, 180 illustrations. 12 Mo. Cloth . $1.50 Sold by Booksellers generally or sent postpaid to any address upon receipt of price by the Publishers FREDERICK J. DRAKE